Circular RNAs in the Mammalian Brain Are Highly Abundant, Conserved, and Dynamically Expressed

Authors
Rybak-Wolf A1, Stottmeister C1, Glažar P1, Jens M1, Pino N2, Giusti S2, Hanan M3, Behm M4, Bartok O3, Ashwal-Fluss R3, Herzog M1, Schreyer L1, Papavasileiou P1, Ivanov A1, Öhman M4, Refojo D5, Kadener S3, Rajewsky N6.
12-16-2015
12:00pm
PST
Categories
Long Noncoding RNAs & Circular RNAs
Speaker
Malin Akberblom
Abstract
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are an endogenous class of animal RNAs. Despite their abundance, their function and expression in the nervous system are unknown. Therefore, we sequenced RNA from different brain regions, primary neurons, isolated synapses, as well as during neuronal differentiation. Using these and other available data, we discovered and analyzed thousands of neuronal human and mouse circRNAs. circRNAs were extraordinarily enriched in the mammalian brain, well conserved in sequence, often expressed as circRNAs in both human and mouse, and sometimes even detected in Drosophila brains. circRNAs were overall upregulated during neuronal differentiation, highly enriched in synapses, and often differentially expressed compared to their mRNA isoforms. circRNA expression correlated negatively with expression of the RNA-editing enzyme ADAR1. Knockdown of ADAR1 induced elevated circRNA expression. Together, we provide a circRNA brain expression atlas and evidence for important circRNA functions and values as biomarkers.