Fig. 5: The role of m6A in X-to-autosome dosage compensation. | Nature Structural & Molecular Biology

Fig. 5: The role of m6A in X-to-autosome dosage compensation.

From: RNA stability controlled by m6A methylation contributes to X-to-autosome dosage compensation in mammals

Fig. 5: The role of m6A in X-to-autosome dosage compensation.

m6A acts as a selective degradation signal on autosomal transcripts and thereby contributes to X-to-autosome dosage compensation. Transcripts from the autosomes are transcribed from two active chromosomes, leading to higher transcript copy numbers per autosomal gene than for X-chromosomal genes. m6A is selectively enriched on transcripts from autosomes, leading to their destabilization and degradation. Because m6A is not enriched on X-chromosomal transcripts, this leads to an equal dosage between autosomal and X-chromosomal transcripts. m6A thereby contributes to X-to-autosome dosage compensation.

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