- Time to SHIFT to BlueSky and share our recent paper introducing SHIFTR, a novel platform for region-specific RNA interactome discovery developed by PhD student Jens Aydin 👨🔬 in my group. Now published in Nucleic Acid Research: academic.oup.com/nar/advance-...
- With SHIFTR you can identify proteins directly bound to a specific region within any endogenous RNA. In addition to delivering region-resolution, SHIFTR requires orders of magnitude lower input material compared to the state-of-the-art, thus removing a critical bottleneck.
- In brief, SHIFTR relies on the sequence-independent isolation of crosslinked RNA-protein complexes by organic phase separation as described in OOPS, XRNAX, or PTex.
- Proteins bound to a specific RNA can be released from interphase extracts by selectively degrading the RNA of interest, for instance with RNase H + specific DNA probes. Loss of the RNA leads to a SHIFT of crosslinked proteins to the organic phase in the next extraction step.
- SHIFTR works for RNAs of different length and abundance (snRNAs, lncRNAs, mRNAs) and is compatible with sequentially releasing interactomes for multiple target RNAs in a single experiment.
- Using SHIFTR, we identify interactions of the 5′ and 3′-terminal regions of authentic SARS-CoV-2 RNAs produced during infection and accurately recover known and novel RNA interactors.Feb 12, 2024 08:09
- In conclusion, SHIFTR enables the systematic mapping of region-resolved RNA interactomes for any RNA in any cell type and has the potential to revolutionize our understanding of transcriptomes and their regulation.