Antisense Genes to Induce Exon Inclusion

Author(s):  
Rachel Nlend Nlend ◽  
Daniel Schümperli
2013 ◽  
Vol 252-253 ◽  
pp. 123-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao Sheng Zhou ◽  
Sheng Ning Yang ◽  
Hua Li ◽  
Can Can Zhu ◽  
Zhao Pu Liu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica A. Hensel ◽  
Brent D. Heineman ◽  
Amy L. Kimble ◽  
Evan R. Jellison ◽  
Bo Reese ◽  
...  

AbstractThe extracellular matrix protein fibronectin (FN) is alternatively spliced in a variety of inflammatory conditions, resulting in increased inclusion of alternative exons EIIIA and EIIIB. Inclusion of these exons affects fibril formation, fibrosis, and inflammation. To define upstream regulators of alternative splicing in FN, we have developed an in vitro flow-cytometry based assay, using RNA-binding probes to determine alternative exon inclusion level in aortic endothelial cells. This approach allows us to detect exon inclusion in the primary transcripts themselves, rather than in surrogate splicing reporters. We validated this assay in cells with and without FN-EIIIA and -EIIIB expression. In a small-scale CRISPR KO screen of candidate regulatory splice factors, we successfully detected known regulators of EIIIA and EIIIB splicing, and detected several novel regulators. Finally, we show the potential in this approach to broadly interrogate upstream signaling pathways in aortic endothelial cells with a genome-wide CRISPR-KO screen, implicating the TNFalpha and RIG-I-like signaling pathways and genes involved in the regulation of fibrotic responses. Thus, we provide a novel means to screen the regulation of splicing of endogenous transcripts, and predict novel pathways in the regulation of FN-EIIIA inclusion.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Baeza-Centurion ◽  
Belén Miñana ◽  
Juan Valcárcel ◽  
Ben Lehner

AbstractGenetic analyses and systematic mutagenesis have revealed that synonymous, non-synonymous and intronic mutations frequently alter the inclusion levels of alternatively spliced exons, consistent with the concept that altered splicing might be a common mechanism by which mutations cause disease. However, most exons expressed in any cell are highly-included in mature mRNAs. Here, by performing deep mutagenesis of highly-included exons and by analysing the association between genome sequence variation and exon inclusion across the transcriptome, we report that mutations only very rarely alter the inclusion of highly-included exons. This is true for both exonic and intronic mutations as well as for perturbations in trans. Therefore, mutations that affect splicing are not evenly distributed across primary transcripts but are focussed in and around alternatively spliced exons with intermediate inclusion levels. These results provide a resource for prioritising synonymous and other variants as disease-causing mutations.


Author(s):  
Joseph N. M. Mol ◽  
Rik Van Blokland ◽  
Pieter De Lange ◽  
Maike Stam ◽  
Jan M. Kooter

Author(s):  
Yimin Hua ◽  
Adrian R. Krainer
Keyword(s):  

Genetics ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 171 (4) ◽  
pp. 2151-2155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianjun Chen ◽  
Miao Sun ◽  
Janet D. Rowley ◽  
Laurence D. Hurst

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