Mitotic phosphorylation of ADAR1 regulates its centromeric localization and is required for faithful mitotic progression
Mitotic phosphorylation of ADAR1 regulates its centromeric localization and is required for faithful mitotic progression
Yang, Y.; Kubota, M.; Hasegawa, K.; Zeng, C.; Nishikura, K.; Hamada, M.; Sakurai, M.
AbstractAdenosine Deaminase Acting on RNA 1 p110 (ADAR1p110), the constitutively expressed nuclear isoform of the RNA-editing enzyme ADAR1, plays well-established roles in adenosine-to-inosine RNA editing, but its functions during mitosis remain poorly defined. Here, we identify ADAR1p110 as a chromatin-associated factor essential for mitotic chromosome segregation and cell viability. Depletion of ADAR1 caused metaphase arrest, DNA damage accumulation, and apoptosis. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments revealed that ADAR1p110 physically interacts with Structural Maintenance of Chromosome 3 (SMC3), a core component of the cohesin complex. Genome-wide DNA immunoprecipitation sequencing (DIP-seq) showed that ADAR1p110 selectively binds centromeric -satellite DNA during mitosis, a finding validated by DNA immunoprecipitation quantitative polymerase chain reaction (DIP-qPCR). Complementary DNA-RNA immunoprecipitation sequencing (DRIP-seq) revealed that RNA:DNA hybrids (R-loops) are enriched in centromeric regions during mitosis and are further augmented by ADAR1 overexpression. We identified serine 614 (S614) as a key mitosis-specific phosphorylation site on ADAR1p110, and demonstrated that this post-translational modification is essential for its chromatin recruitment, stability, and mitotic function. Rescue experiments using phospho-mimetic mutants (S614D and 3xD) successfully restored mitotic progression in ADAR1-deficient cells, whereas non-phosphorylatable variants failed to do so. These results reveal that ADAR1p110 is phosphorylated in a cell cycle-dependent manner and functions at the intersection of post-transcriptional and post-translational regulation. By coordinating R-loop recognition at centromeres with chromosome cohesion, ADAR1p110 safeguards genome integrity during mitosis. Our findings uncover a previously uncharacterized mechanism through which a canonical RNA-editing enzyme contributes to chromosomal dynamics independent of its deaminase activity.