Cocaine remodels m(6)A RNA-dependent signaling to drive locomotor plasticity in Drosophila melanogaster

可卡因重塑m(6)A RNA依赖性信号通路,从而驱动果蝇的运动可塑性。

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Abstract

N(6)-methyladenosine (m(6)A) is a dynamic RNA modification that regulates RNA stability, processing, and translation and is increasingly recognized as a key modulator of neuronal plasticity. However, how psychostimulant exposure reshapes m(6)A-dependent regulatory networks across coding and non-coding RNA species remains poorly understood. We investigated the impact of volatilized cocaine (vCOC) exposure on m(6)A RNA methylation, m(6)A pathway components, transcriptome, and cocaine-induced locomotor sensitization in Drosophila melanogaster. Acute vCOC administration significantly increased global m(6)A levels in total and poly(A)-enriched RNA, with a stronger effect in polyadenylated transcripts. This increase occurred without changes in the m(6)A methyltransferases Mettl3 and Mettl14 transcripts, but was accompanied by robust upregulation of the levels of m(6)A reader YTHDC and YTHDF transcripts. Genetic and cell-type-specific analyses revealed distinct and context-dependent roles for m(6)A writers and readers in neurons and glia, with m(6)A readers being essential for vCOC-induced locomotor sensitization. Integration of RNA-seq and MeRIP-seq demonstrated that vCOC selectively amplifies m(6)A modification of regulatory and plasticity-associated RNA classes, including mRNAs involved in RNA processing, antisense RNAs, long non-coding RNAs, and transposable element-derived transcripts. In contrast, m(6)A-modified RNAs shared in CTRL and vCOC were enriched for core metabolic and mitochondrial pathways, such as oxidative phosphorylation. Notably, vCOC increased m(6)A modification of non-coding RNAs and transposable elements with minimal overlap with control conditions, indicating cocaine-induced engagement of epitranscriptomic regulation at multiple layers of the transcriptome. Together, these findings reveal that cocaine exposure reinforces an m(6)A-defined regulatory RNA network, spanning coding and non-coding transcripts that is mechanistically linked to m(6)A reader-dependent behavioral plasticity.

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