Abstract
RNA translation is tightly regulated to ensure proper protein expression in cells and tissues. Translation is often assayed with biochemical assays such as ribosome profiling and TRAP, which are effective in many contexts. These assays are however not ideal with limiting amounts of biological material when it can be difficult or even impossible to make an extract with sufficient signal or sufficient signal:noise. Because of our interest in translational regulation within the few Drosophila adult circadian neurons, we fused the ADAR catalytic domain (ADARcd) to several small subunit ribosomal proteins and assayed mRNA editing in Drosophila S2 cells. The strategy is named RiboTRIBE and is analogous to a recently published APOBEC-based method. The list of RiboTRIBE-edited transcripts overlaps well with ribosome profiling targets, especially with more highly ranked targets. There is also an enriched number of editing sites in ribosome-associated mRNA comparing to total mRNA, indicating that editing occurs preferentially on polyribosome-associated transcripts. The use of cycloheximide to freeze translating ribosomes causes a substantial increase in the number of RiboTRIBE targets, which is decreased by pretreating cells with the chain terminating drug puromycin. The data taken together indicate that RiboTRIBE successfully identifies transcripts undergoing active translation.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.