The ADAR family of RNA-editing enzymes deaminates
adenosines within RNA that is completely or largely double
stranded. In mammals, most of the characterized substrates
encode receptors involved in neurotransmission, and these
substrates are thought to be targeted by the mammalian
enzymes ADAR1 and ADAR2. Although some ADAR substrates
are deaminated very promiscuously, mammalian glutamate
receptor B (gluR-B) pre-mRNA is deaminated at a few specific
adenosines. Like most double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) binding
proteins, ADARs bind to many different sequences, but few
studies have directly measured and compared binding affinities.
We have attempted to determine if ADAR deamination specificity
occurs because the enzymes bind to targeted regions with
higher affinities. To explore this question we studied
binding of rat ADAR2 to a region of rat gluR-B pre-mRNA
that contains the R/G editing site, and compared a wild-type
molecule with one containing mutations that decreased R/G
site editing. Although binding affinity to the two sequences
was almost identical, footprinting studies indicate ADAR2
binds to the wild-type RNA at a discrete region surrounding
the editing site, whereas binding to the mutant appeared
nonspecific.