scholarly journals Myosin light-chain 1/3 gene alternative splicing: cis regulation is based upon a hierarchical compatibility between splice sites.

1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 2133-2144 ◽  
Author(s):  
M E Gallego ◽  
B Nadal-Ginard

The mechanisms involved in the selective joining of appropriate 5' and 3' splice sites are still poorly understood in both constitutive and alternatively spliced genes. With two promoters associated with different exons, the myosin light-chain 1/3 gene generates two pre-mRNAs that also differ by the use of a pair of internal exons, 3 and 4, that are spliced in a mutually exclusive fashion. When the promoter upstream from exon 1 is used, only exon 4 is included. If the promoter upstream from exon 2 is used, only exon 3 is included. In an attempt to understand the molecular basis for the mutually exclusive behavior of these two exons and the basis of their specific selection, a number of minigene constructs containing exons 3 and 4 were tested in a variety of homologous or heterologous cis and trans environments. The results demonstrate that the mutually exclusive behavior of myosin light-chain exons 3 and 4 and selection between the two exons are cis regulated and are affected by the nature of the flanking sequences. Both exons competed for the common flanking 5' and 3' splice sites. Flanking exons were found that favored inclusion into mature mRNA of exon 3, exon 4, both, or neither, suggesting a specific cooperative interaction between certain 5' and 3' splice sites. Thus, alternative splicing of myosin light-chain 1/3 pre-mRNAs is regulated in cis by a hierarchy of compatibilities between pairs of 5' and 3' splice sites.

1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 2133-2144
Author(s):  
M E Gallego ◽  
B Nadal-Ginard

The mechanisms involved in the selective joining of appropriate 5' and 3' splice sites are still poorly understood in both constitutive and alternatively spliced genes. With two promoters associated with different exons, the myosin light-chain 1/3 gene generates two pre-mRNAs that also differ by the use of a pair of internal exons, 3 and 4, that are spliced in a mutually exclusive fashion. When the promoter upstream from exon 1 is used, only exon 4 is included. If the promoter upstream from exon 2 is used, only exon 3 is included. In an attempt to understand the molecular basis for the mutually exclusive behavior of these two exons and the basis of their specific selection, a number of minigene constructs containing exons 3 and 4 were tested in a variety of homologous or heterologous cis and trans environments. The results demonstrate that the mutually exclusive behavior of myosin light-chain exons 3 and 4 and selection between the two exons are cis regulated and are affected by the nature of the flanking sequences. Both exons competed for the common flanking 5' and 3' splice sites. Flanking exons were found that favored inclusion into mature mRNA of exon 3, exon 4, both, or neither, suggesting a specific cooperative interaction between certain 5' and 3' splice sites. Thus, alternative splicing of myosin light-chain 1/3 pre-mRNAs is regulated in cis by a hierarchy of compatibilities between pairs of 5' and 3' splice sites.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 5271-5278 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Mineo ◽  
P R Clarke ◽  
R L Sabina ◽  
E W Holmes

AMP deaminase (AMPD) is a central enzyme in eucaryotic energy metabolism, and tissue-specific as well as stage-specific isoforms are found in many vertebrates. This study demonstrates the AMPD1 gene product in rat is alternatively spliced. The second exon, a 12-base miniexon, was found to be excluded or included in a tissue-specific and stage-specific pattern. This example of cassette splicing utilizes a unique pathway through an RNA intermediate that generates an alternative 5' splice donor site at the point where exon 2 is ligated to exon 1. In the analogous intermediate of human AMPD1, the potential 5' splice donor site created at the boundary of exon 1 and exon 2 was a poor substrate for splicing because of differences in exon 2 sequences, and human AMPD1 was not alternatively spliced. These results demonstrate that in some cases alternative splicing may proceed through an RNA intermediate that generates an alternative splice donor site not present in the primary transcript. Discrimination between alternative 5' splice donor sites in the RNA intermediate of AMPD1 is apparently controlled by tissue-specific and stage-specific signals.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 3826-3829 ◽  
Author(s):  
L I Garfinkel ◽  
N Davidson

Fast skeletal muscle myosin light-chain I (MLC1f) and myosin light-chain 3 (MLC3f) mRNAs are both derived from a single rat MLC1/3f gene. MLC1f mRNA begins at the first exon of the gene, while MLC3f mRNA begins with exon 2, 10 kilobases downstream. Both mRNAs require alternate splicing of internal exons for accurate expression. We showed that a truncated rat MLC1f/3f gene lacking exon 1 and the first 6.3 kilobases of the intron separating exons 1 and 2 produced rat MLC3f mRNA in a developmentally regulated manner after introduction into myogenic mouse cells, thus demonstrating in vivo the presence of a functional promoter associated with exon 2. Correctly spliced mRNA was produced after transfer of this truncated gene into both myogenic and nonmyogenic cells, indicating that the pattern of splicing of this complex transcript was due to a structural features of the RNA and was independent of cell type.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 5271-5278
Author(s):  
I Mineo ◽  
P R Clarke ◽  
R L Sabina ◽  
E W Holmes

AMP deaminase (AMPD) is a central enzyme in eucaryotic energy metabolism, and tissue-specific as well as stage-specific isoforms are found in many vertebrates. This study demonstrates the AMPD1 gene product in rat is alternatively spliced. The second exon, a 12-base miniexon, was found to be excluded or included in a tissue-specific and stage-specific pattern. This example of cassette splicing utilizes a unique pathway through an RNA intermediate that generates an alternative 5' splice donor site at the point where exon 2 is ligated to exon 1. In the analogous intermediate of human AMPD1, the potential 5' splice donor site created at the boundary of exon 1 and exon 2 was a poor substrate for splicing because of differences in exon 2 sequences, and human AMPD1 was not alternatively spliced. These results demonstrate that in some cases alternative splicing may proceed through an RNA intermediate that generates an alternative splice donor site not present in the primary transcript. Discrimination between alternative 5' splice donor sites in the RNA intermediate of AMPD1 is apparently controlled by tissue-specific and stage-specific signals.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 3826-3829
Author(s):  
L I Garfinkel ◽  
N Davidson

Fast skeletal muscle myosin light-chain I (MLC1f) and myosin light-chain 3 (MLC3f) mRNAs are both derived from a single rat MLC1/3f gene. MLC1f mRNA begins at the first exon of the gene, while MLC3f mRNA begins with exon 2, 10 kilobases downstream. Both mRNAs require alternate splicing of internal exons for accurate expression. We showed that a truncated rat MLC1f/3f gene lacking exon 1 and the first 6.3 kilobases of the intron separating exons 1 and 2 produced rat MLC3f mRNA in a developmentally regulated manner after introduction into myogenic mouse cells, thus demonstrating in vivo the presence of a functional promoter associated with exon 2. Correctly spliced mRNA was produced after transfer of this truncated gene into both myogenic and nonmyogenic cells, indicating that the pattern of splicing of this complex transcript was due to a structural features of the RNA and was independent of cell type.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 1361-1365
Author(s):  
R Billeter ◽  
W Quitschke ◽  
B M Paterson

Approximately 1 kilobase of genomic DNA from the chicken fast myosin light-chain 1f/3f gene 5' to the transcriptional start sites for each light-chain mRNA was sufficient for differentiation-dependent, tissue-restricted expression. This was determined in primary chick myoblast cultures transfected with the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) expression vector p8CAT containing these 5'-flanking sequences. The expression of CAT activity from both light-chain promoters was 10- to 20-fold higher in differentiated myotubes than in fibroblasts or myoblasts grown in bromodeoxyuridine. In contrast, the beta-actin and Rous sarcoma virus promoters joined to the CAT gene were expressed equally in all cell backgrounds tested. Even though the relative timing of light-chain 1f and 3f expression was altered, tissue-restricted, differentiation-dependent expression of the light-chain mRNAs was maintained with these 5' cis-acting sequence elements.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 902-910 ◽  
Author(s):  
A M Rushforth ◽  
B Saari ◽  
P Anderson

We used the polymerase chain reaction to detect insertions of the transposon Tc1 into mlc-2, one of two Caenorhabditis elegans regulatory myosin light chain genes. Our goals were to develop a general method to identify mutations in any sequenced gene and to establish the phenotype of mlc-2 loss-of-function mutants. The sensitivity of the polymerase chain reaction allowed us to identify nematode populations containing rare Tc1 insertions into mcl-2. mlc-2::Tc1 mutants were subsequently isolated from these populations by a sib selection procedure. We isolated three mutants with Tc1 insertions within the mlc-2 third exon and a fourth strain with Tc1 inserted in nearby noncoding DNA. To demonstrate the generality of our procedure, we isolated two additional mutants with Tc1 insertions within hlh-1, the C. elegans MyoD homolog. All of these mutants are essentially wild type when homozygous. Despite the fact that certain of these mutants have Tc1 inserted within exons of the target gene, these mutations may not be true null alleles. All three of the mlc-2 mutants contain mlc-2 mRNA in which all or part of Tc1 is spliced from the pre-mRNA, leaving small in-frame insertions or deletions in the mature message. There is a remarkable plasticity in the sites used to splice Tc1 from these mlc-2 pre-mRNAs; certain splice sites used in the mutants are very different from typical eukaryotic splice sites.


2007 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shelley X. L. Zhang ◽  
Tina R. Searcy ◽  
Yiman Wu ◽  
David Gozal ◽  
Yang Wang

Expression patterns of monocarboxylate transporter 2 (MCT2) display mRNA diversity in a tissue-specific fashion. We cloned and characterized multiple mct2 5′-cDNA ends from the mouse and determined the structural organization of the mct2 gene. We found that transcription of this gene was initiated from five independent genomic regions that spanned >80 kb on chromosome 10, resulting in five unique exon 1 variants (exons 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, and 1e) that were then spliced to the common exon 2. Alternative splicing of four internal exons (exons AS1, AS2, AS3, and exon 3) greatly increased the complexity of mRNA diversity. While exon 1c was relatively commonly used for transcription initiation in various tissues, other exon 1 variants were used in a tissue-specific fashion, especially exons 1b and 1d that were used exclusively for testis-specific expression. Sequence analysis of 5′-flanking regions upstream of exons 1a, 1b, and 1c revealed the presence of numerous potential binding sites for ubiquitous transcription factors in all three regions and for transcription factors implicated in testis-specific or hypoxia-induced gene expression in the 1b region. Transient transfection assays demonstrated that each of the three regions contained a functional promoter and that the in vitro, cell type-specific activities of these promoters were consistent with the tissue-specific expression pattern of the mct2 gene in vivo. These results indicate that tissue-specific expression of the mct2 gene is controlled by multiple alternative promoters and that both alternative promoter usage and alternative splicing contribute to the remarkable mRNA diversity of the gene.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2316-2316
Author(s):  
Jihyun Song ◽  
Seonggyun Han ◽  
Ricardo Amaru ◽  
Teddy Quispe ◽  
Dongwook Kim ◽  
...  

Abstract Evolutionary adaptations to high altitude in Tibetans, Ethiopians, and Andean populations of South America have shown that Tibetans and Ethiopians have normal hemoglobin %, while most of Aymara and Quechua of the Andean highlands are polycythemic. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) in Quechua identified enriched SENP1 and ANP32D genes correlating with polycythemia (Zhou et al, Am J Hum Genet. 2013 Sep 5; 93(3): 452-462) but these genes were neither enriched nor segregated with polycythemia in Aymara. Instead, we identified that genes enriched in Aymara are related to regulation of cardiovascular development in high-altitude adapted Andeans, BRINP3, NOS2, and TBX5 (Crawford et al, Am J Hum Genet. 2017 Nov 2;101(5):752-767). To further search for Aymara propensity to polycythemia, we analyzed transcriptomes from Aymara and Europeans living in La Paz, Bolivia (3,639-4,150m) from limited amount of peripheral blood reticulocytes, platelets and granulocytes, but only granulocyte RNA was adequate for unbiased whole transcriptome analyses. In Aymaras, 2,585 genes were upregulated and 365 genes were downregulated (Adjp<0.05, fold difference <-2.0, and >2.0). Many of these modulated genes are involved in inflammatory pathways including B-cell activation (FDR=0.005) and NF-κB signaling pathway (FDR=0.011). We then analyzed differential exon usage in the transcriptome and identified 2,475 genes with alternative splicing events, comprising 1,568 exon skipping, 485 intron retention, 175 alternative 3' splice sites, 144 alternative 5' splice sites, and 902 mutually exclusive exons. These alternative spliced genes were also overrepresented in inflammatory pathways (TNF receptor, IL-1 and IL-23 mediated signaling, and NF-κB signaling). Notably we detected the previously unreported NFKB1 alternate transcripts skipping exon 4 or 5, which lead to the out-of-framed NFKB1 mRNA, generating the truncated nonfunctional NF-κB protein (Figure). Inflammation is a potent suppressor of erythropoiesis and the NF-κB is transcriptional regulator of plethora of inflammatory genes. Further, NF-κB also interacts with erythropoiesis-regulators, hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs). By the integrative analysis of the Aymara transcriptome and WGS, we identified 46 NFKB1 splicing quantitative trait loci (sQTLs). Among these 46 sQTLs, five single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) were in high linkage disequilibrium, and two (rs230511 and rs230504) were more enriched in Aymara (allele frequency: 0.878) (Figure) and within a genomic region where Andeans are genetically differentiated from lowland Native Americans (peak FST = 0.37, peak PBSn1 = 0.31). These sQTLs rs230511 and rs230504 were corelated with two functionally important exon skipping (exon 4 and 5) in NFKB1 as described above. Furthermore, these two SNPs were correlated with higher hemoglobin levels and lower leukocytes; the wild-type NFKB1 transcript inversely correlated with hemoglobin%. We report Aymara have differentially expressed and alternatively spliced transcripts of genes modulating inflammation, particularly NFKB1. This Aymara enriched NFKB1 haplotype variant stands out as a major cause of Aymara adaptation to high altitude, as this truncated nonfunctional NF-κB variant peptide correlates with higher hemoglobin, lower leukocytes and suppresses inflammation. These data indicate that NFKB1 SNPs enriched in Aymara are associated with alternative spliced NFKB1 transcripts which contribute to polycythemia in Aymara. Further evaluation of NF-κB and HIFs' transcriptional activity and their correlation with inflammatory makers, hepcidin and erythroferrone in Aymara and Europeans living at the same high altitude is under way. JS and SH contributed equally to this work. YL and JTP act as equivalent co-senior authors. Figure. Figure. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 6192-6196
Author(s):  
S R Wessler

The null wx-ml allele contains a 409-bp Dissociation 1 (Ds1) element in exon 9 of the maize waxy (Wx) gene. In the absence of the autonomous Activator (Ac) element, the Ds1 element cannot transpose, and this allele encodes several Wx transcripts that arise following alternative splicing of Ds1 sequences from Wx pre-mRNA. Splicing involves the utilization of three 5' splice sites and three 3' splice sites. All but one of these splice sites are in Ds1 sequences near the ends of the element. The presence of 5' and 3' splice sites near the Ds1 termini and the element's small size and AT richness are features that distinguish Ds1 elements from all other known Ds elements. It is suggested that these features may enhance the ability of Ds1 to function as a mobile intron.


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