TY - JOUR T1 - Scans of the <em>MYC</em> mRNA reveal multiple stable secondary structures—including a 3′ UTR motif, conserved across vertebrates, that can affect gene expression JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/564864 SP - 564864 AU - Collin A. O’Leary AU - Ryan J. Andrews AU - Van S. Tompkins AU - Jonathan L. Chen AU - Jessica L. Childs-Disney AU - Matthew D. Disney AU - Walter N. Moss Y1 - 2019/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/03/02/564864.abstract N2 - The MYC gene encodes a human transcription factor and proto-oncogene that is dysregulated in over half of all known cancers. To better understand potential post-transcriptional regulatory features affecting MYC expression, we analyzed secondary structure in the MYC mRNA using a program that is optimized for finding small locally-folded motifs with a high propensity for function. This was accomplished by calculating folding metrics across the MYC sequence using a sliding analysis window and generating unique consensus base pairing models weighted by their lower-than-random predicted folding energy. A series of 30 motifs were identified, primarily in the 5’ and 3’ untranslated regions, which show evidence of structural conservation and compensating mutations across vertebrate MYC homologs. This analysis was able to recapitulate known elements found within an internal ribosomal entry site, as well as discover a novel element in the 3’ UTR that is unusually stable and conserved. This novel motif was shown to affect MYC expression: likely via modulation of miRNA target accessibility. In addition to providing basic insights into mechanisms that regulate MYC expression, this study provides numerous, potentially druggable RNA targets for the MYC gene, which is considered “undruggable” at the protein level. ER -