Decades of research have demonstrated that RNA molecules can serve as architectural scaffolds, templating the assembly of subcellular compartments in all kingdoms of life. In mammals, architectural RNAs scaffold an array of subnuclear structures that are essential to cellular function including metabolism, DNA repair, and epigenetic programming. Many of these architectural RNAs are causally dysregulated in diseases, including cancer and neurodegenerative disorders. However, the molecular mechanisms of these architectural RNAs remain poorly understood, partially because technologies for identifying the molecules (proteins, DNAs, other RNAs), with which RNAs interact are lacking. To address this challenge, the Shechner Lab has developed a technology termed Oligonucleotide-Directed Biotinylation (ODB), a universal method for elucidating RNA subcellular interactions. ODB applies a powerful method called proximity-biotinylation to individual RNAs. In proximity-biotinylation, a promiscuous biotinylating enzyme (e.g. Horseradish Peroxidase, HRP) is targeted to a subcellular compartment of interest. This enzyme then tags nearby (~10 nm) molecules with biotin, enabling their straightforward isolation and analysis. ODB advances this technology by using RNA-in situ Hybridization (RNA¬–FISH) methods to precisely deploy HRP to individual RNAs. Ongoing work, using a series of model RNA targets, has demonstrated that ODB can reveal the proteins, RNAs, and genomic loci near a target RNA at exceptional depth and precision. My goal is to generalize this ODB protocol, developing methods that can be applied to any RNA target. To examine how RNA abundance influences ODB experimental design, I use pulse-chase, RNA decay experiments to manipulate the expression of the architectural RNA NEAT1, and examine how to adjust parameters of the ODB protocol to compensate for this altered expression. Likewise, I am using imaging-based assays to investigate how ODB's biotinylation radius varies with labeling conditions, increasing the range of ODB’s target radii. Collectively, this establishes general guidelines for adapting ODB to novel RNA targets.