alternate splicing
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2021 ◽  
Vol 221 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Crosby ◽  
Melissa R. Mikolaj ◽  
Sarah B. Nyenhuis ◽  
Samantha Bryce ◽  
Jenny E. Hinshaw ◽  
...  

ER network formation depends on membrane fusion by the atlastin (ATL) GTPase. In humans, three paralogs are differentially expressed with divergent N- and C-terminal extensions, but their respective roles remain unknown. This is partly because, unlike Drosophila ATL, the fusion activity of human ATLs has not been reconstituted. Here, we report successful reconstitution of fusion activity by the human ATLs. Unexpectedly, the major splice isoforms of ATL1 and ATL2 are each autoinhibited, albeit to differing degrees. For the more strongly inhibited ATL2, autoinhibition mapped to a C-terminal α-helix is predicted to be continuous with an amphipathic helix required for fusion. Charge reversal of residues in the inhibitory domain strongly activated its fusion activity, and overexpression of this disinhibited version caused ER collapse. Neurons express an ATL2 splice isoform whose sequence differs in the inhibitory domain, and this form showed full fusion activity. These findings reveal autoinhibition and alternate splicing as regulators of atlastin-mediated ER fusion.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guy Karlebach ◽  
Bruce J Aronow ◽  
Stephen J Baylin ◽  
Daniel Butler ◽  
Jonathan Foox ◽  
...  

Viruses can subvert a number of cellular processes in order to block innate antiviral responses, and many viruses interact with cellular splicing machinery. SARS-CoV-2 infection was shown to suppress global mRNA splicing, and at least 10 SARS-CoV-2 proteins bind specifically to one or more human RNAs. Here, we investigate 17 published experimental and clinical datasets related to SARS-CoV-2 infection as well as datasets from the betacoronaviruses SARS-CoV and MERS as well as Streptococcus pneumonia, HCV, Zika virus, Dengue virus, influenza H3N2, and RSV. We show that genes showing differential alternative splicing in SARS-CoV-2 have a similar functional profile to those of SARS-CoV and MERS and affect a diverse set of genes and biological functions, including many closely related to virus biology. Additionally, the differentially spliced transcripts of cells infected by coronaviruses were more likely to undergo intron-retention, contain a pseudouridine modification and a smaller number of exons than differentially spliced transcripts in the control groups. Viral load in clinical COVID-19 samples was correlated with isoform distribution of differentially spliced genes. A significantly higher number of ribosomal genes are affected by DAS and DGE in betacoronavirus samples, and the betacoronavirus differentially spliced genes are depleted for binding sites of RNA-binding proteins. Our results demonstrate characteristic patterns of differential splicing in cells infected by SARS-CoV-2, SARS-CoV, and MERS, potentially modifying a broad range of cellular functions and affecting a diverse set of genes and biological functions.


Author(s):  
Karuppusamy T, Et. al.

Identification or prediction of coding sequences from within genomic DNA has been a major part of the search of the gene. In this work real hidden Markov models (HMMs) to denote the consensus and deliver a beneficial tool in determining the splicing junction sites Markov models which has a recurring nature in computational biology leads to statistical models, in every sequential analysis it plays a role of putting up a right label on each residue. In sequential alignment and as well as in gene identification namely exons, introns or intergenic sequences which make in a sequence with homologous residue with the target database. Under the gene identification methodology Condon bias, exons, introns have length preference which leads to a combination of splice site consensus. Parameters are fixed on the onset while weight of the different information are polled together leading to the interception of result probability, which could lead to identifying the best score based on score mean and how confident are the best scoring answers are perfect. This leads to the concept of extendibility, to perfect and ad hoc gene finder, which is a modeled transitional methodology leading to the consensus, alternate splicing and offers polyadenylation signal. This leads to piling of authenticity against a delicate ad hoc program which could make to breakdown under its individual weightiness.  


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Guo-Liang Chew ◽  
Marie Bleakley ◽  
Robert K. Bradley ◽  
Harmit S. Malik ◽  
Steven Henikoff ◽  
...  

AbstractShort H2A (sH2A) histone variants are primarily expressed in the testes of placental mammals. Their incorporation into chromatin is associated with nucleosome destabilization and modulation of alternate splicing. Here, we show that sH2As innately possess features similar to recurrent oncohistone mutations associated with nucleosome instability. Through analyses of existing cancer genomics datasets, we find aberrant sH2A upregulation in a broad array of cancers, which manifest splicing patterns consistent with global nucleosome destabilization. We posit that short H2As are a class of “ready-made” oncohistones, whose inappropriate expression contributes to chromatin dysfunction in cancer.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 117793222110458
Author(s):  
Siddhartha Kundu

An RNA G-quadruplex in the protein coding segment of mRNA is translatable [Formula: see text] and may potentially impact protein translation. This can be consequent to staggered ribosomal synthesis and/or result in an increased frequency of missense translational events. A mathematical model of the peptides that encompass the substituted amino acids, ie, the [Formula: see text]-mapped peptidome, has been previously studied. However, the significance and relevance to disease biology of this model remains to be established. ProTG4 computes a confidence-of-sequence-identity [Formula: see text]-score, which is the average weighted length of every matched [Formula: see text]-mapped peptide in a generic protein sequence. The weighted length is the product of the length of the peptide and the probability of its non-random occurrence in a library of randomly generated sequences of equivalent lengths. This is then averaged over the entire length of the protein sequence. ProTG4 is simple to operate, has clear instructions, and is accompanied by a set of ready-to-use examples. The rationale of the study, algorithms deployed, and the computational pipeline deployed are also part of the web page. Analyses by ProTG4 of taxonomically diverse protein sequences suggest that there is significant homology to [Formula: see text]-mapped peptides. These findings, especially in potentially infectious and infesting agents, offer plausible explanations into the aetiology and pathogenesis of certain proteopathies. ProTG4 can also provide a quantitative measure to identify and annotate the canonical form of a generic protein sequence from its known isoforms. The article presents several case studies and discusses the relevance of ProTG4-assisted peptide analysis in gaining insights into various mechanisms of disease biology (mistranslation, alternate splicing, amino acid substitutions).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriele Lignani ◽  
Andrianos Liavas ◽  
Dimitri M Kullmann ◽  
Stephanie Schorge

AbstractNeuronal excitability is tightly regulated, requiring rapidly activating and inactivating voltage-gated sodium channels to allow accurate temporal encoding of information. Alternative splicing greatly broadens the repertoire of channels, but the adaptive significance of this phenomenon is incompletely understood. An alternative splicing event that is conserved across vertebrates affects part of the first domain of sodium channels and modulates their availability after inactivation. Here we use this conserved splicing event to ask whether this modulation has consistent effects in different neuronal backgrounds, or whether a conserved splicing event can be exploited to produce distinct effects in different cell types. We show that the consequences of alternate splicing of human Nav1.1 and Nav1.2 for neuronal activity depend on whether they are expressed in the cell types where they normally predominate (interneurons or excitatory neurons, respectively). Splicing in the ‘adult’ isoform in both channels is sufficient to slow action potential rise times in all neurons. However, changes to both action potential half width and maximal firing rate are specific to cell type and channel, with each channel appearing tuned to mediate effects in its predominant neuronal background. Finally, we use dynamic clamp to demonstrate that alternative splicing in Nav1.1 changes how interneurons fire during epileptiform events. Our data show that, for sodium channels, despite conserved amino acid changes and similar effects on channel gating, alternative splicing has distinct impacts on neuronal properties, thus highlighting how closely sodium channels are tuned to distinct cellular backgrounds.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Talia Ishfaq ◽  
Zaain Ahmad ◽  
Nourhan Mohamed ◽  
Milica Janosevic ◽  
Ziyad Abdelrahim ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
R. Manjunatha Kini ◽  
Swati Kundu

The 2019-Novel Coronavirus has currently gripped the world in terror, affecting 210 countries and territories as of April 29, 2020. Originating from Wuhan, Hubei province, China, the virus has spread so rapidly throughout the world and has already claimed 218,000 lives and is currently afflicting 3.14 million people. The US has over 1.03 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, followed by Spain, Italy, France, UK, Germany, Turkey, Russia, Iran, and China. On careful inspection of the COVID-19 statistics, a peculiar unsettling trend becomes apparent. Western European countries and the US appear to have difficulties in overcoming the catastrophe. In contrast, countries in East Asia, Middle East and mid-Europe have sorted out the situation. Here, we will highlight this trend and propose the importance of infection-genomics (sankramikogenomics), in understanding the susceptibility to COVID-19 and the severity of disease progress. More detailed evaluation may also identify more susceptible populations. Such differences are due to variations in structure or tissue-specific expression (alternate splicing and accessibility) of the target receptors. So, we will highlight mere 12-fold lower affinity is insufficient to ignore CD147, as interactions occur between tens of spike proteins and equal number of cell surface ACE2 and/or CD147. Similar to pharmacogenomics to drug development and precision medicine, Sankramikogenomics will become an important field in other infectious diseases and pathogenicity.


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