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Humans have two nearly identical copies of the Survival Motor Neuron (SMN) gene, SMN1 and SMN2. In spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), SMN2 is not able to compensate for the loss of SMN1 due to exclusion of exon 7. Here we describe a novel inhibitory element located immediately downstream of the 5' splice site in intron 7. We call this element intronic splicing silencer N1 (ISS-N1). Deletion of ISS-N1 promoted exon 7 inclusion in mRNAs derived from the SMN2 minigene. Underlining the dominant role of ISS-N1 in exon 7 skipping, abrogation of a number of positive cis elements was tolerated when ISS-N1 was deleted. Confirming the silencer function of ISS-N1, an antisense oligonucleotide against ISS-N1 restored exon 7 inclusion in mRNAs derived from the SMN2 minigene or from endogenous SMN2. Consistently, this oligonucleotide increased the levels of SMN protein in SMA patient-derived cells that carry only the SMN2 gene. Our findings underscore for the first time the profound impact of an evolutionarily nonconserved intronic element on SMN2 exon 7 splicing. Considering that oligonucleotides annealing to intronic sequences do not interfere with exon-junction complex formation or mRNA transport and translation, ISS-N1 provides a very specific and efficient therapeutic target for antisense oligonucleotide-mediated correction of SMN2 splicing in SMA.  相似文献   

3.
Alternative splicing of exon 7B in the hnRNP A1 pre-mRNA produces mRNAs encoding two proteins: hnRNP A1 and the less abundant A1B. We have reported the identification of several intron elements that contribute to exon 7B skipping. In this study, we report the activity of a novel element, conserved element 9 (CE9), located in the intron downstream of exon 7B. We show that multiple copies of CE9 inhibit exon 7B-exon 8 splicing in vitro. When CE9 is inserted between two competing 3' splice sites, a single copy of CE9 decreases splicing to the distal 3' splice site. Our in vivo results also support the conclusion that CE9 is a splicing modulator. First, inserting multiple copies of CE9 into an A1 minigene compromises the production of fully spliced products. Second, one copy of CE9 stimulates the inclusion of a short internal exon in a derivative of the human beta-globin gene. In this case, in vitro splicing assays suggest that CE9 decreases splicing of intron 1, an event that improves splicing of intron 2 and decreases skipping of the short internal exon. The ability of CE9 to act on heterologous substrates, combined with the results of a competition assay, suggest that the activity of CE9 is mediated by a trans-acting factor. Our results indicate that CE9 represses the use of the common 3' splice site in the hnRNP A1 alternative splicing unit.  相似文献   

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The essential splicing factor SF2/ASF and the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNP A1) modulate alternative splicing in vitro of pre-mRNAs that contain 5' splice sites of comparable strengths competing for a common 3' splice site. Using natural and model pre-mRNAs, we have examined whether the ratio of SF2/ASF to hnRNP A1 also regulates other modes of alternative splicing in vitro. We found that an excess of SF2/ASF effectively prevents inappropriate exon skipping and also influences the selection of mutually exclusive tissue-specific exons in natural beta-tropomyosin pre-mRNA. In contrast, an excess of hnRNP A1 does not cause inappropriate exon skipping in natural constitutively or alternatively spliced pre-mRNAs. Although hnRNP A1 can promote alternative exon skipping, this effect is not universal and is dependent, e.g., on the size of the internal alternative exon and on the strength of the polypyrimidine tract in the preceding intron. With appropriate alternative exons, an excess of SF2/ASF promotes exon inclusion, whereas an excess of hnRNP A1 causes exon skipping. We propose that in some cases the ratio of SF2/ASF to hnRNP A1 may play a role in regulating alternative splicing by exon inclusion or skipping through the antagonistic effects of these proteins on alternative splice site selection.  相似文献   

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Human apolipoprotein A-II (apoA-II) intron 2/exon 3 junction shows a peculiar tract of alternating pyrimidines and purines (GU tract) that makes the acceptor site deviate significantly from the consensus. However, apoA-II exon 3 is constitutively included in mRNA. We have studied this unusual exon definition by creating a construct with the genomic fragment encompassing the whole gene from apoA-II and its regulatory regions. Transient transfections in Hep3B cells have shown that deletion or replacement of the GU repeats at the 3' splice site resulted in a decrease of apoA-II exon 3 inclusion, indicating a possible role of the GU tract in splicing. However, a 3' splice site composed of the GU tract in heterologous context, such as the extra domain A of human fibronectin or cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator exon 9, resulted in total skipping of the exons. Next, we identified the exonic cis-acting elements that may affect the splicing efficiency of apoA-II exon 3 and found that the region spanning from nucleotide 87 to 113 of human apoA-II exon 3 is essential for its inclusion in the mRNA. Overlapping deletions and point mutations (between nucleotides 91 and 102) precisely defined an exonic splicing enhancer (ESEwt). UV cross-linking assays followed by immunoprecipitation with anti-SR protein monoclonal antibodies showed that ESEwt, but not mutated ESE RNA, was able to bind both alternative splicing factor/splicing factor 2 and SC35. Furthermore, overexpression of both splicing factors enhanced exon 3 inclusion. These results show that this protein-ESE interaction is able to promote the incorporation of exon 3 in mRNA and suggest that they can rescue the splicing despite the noncanonical 3' splice site.  相似文献   

8.
The hnRNP A1 pre-mRNA is alternatively spliced to yield the A1 and A1b mRNAs, which encode proteins differing in their ability to modulate 5' splice site selection. Sequencing a genomic portion of the murine A1 gene revealed that the intron separating exon 7 and the alternative exon 7B is highly conserved between mouse and human. In vitro splicing assays indicate that a conserved element (CE1) from the central portion of the intron shifts selection toward the distal donor site when positioned in between the 5' splice sites of exon 7 and 7B. In vivo, the CE1 element promotes exon 7B skipping. A 17-nucleotide sequence within CE1 (CE1a) is sufficient to activate the distal 5' splice site. RNase T1 protection/immunoprecipitation assays indicate that hnRNP A1 binds to CE1a, which contains the sequence UAGAGU, a close match to the reported optimal A1 binding site, UAGGGU. Replacing CE1a by different oligonucleotides carrying the sequence UAGAGU or UAGGGU maintains the preference for the distal 5' splice site. In contrast, mutations in the AUGAGU sequence activate the proximal 5' splice site. In support of a direct role of the A1-CE1 interaction in 5'-splice-site selection, we observed that the amplitude of the shift correlates with the efficiency of A1 binding. Whereas addition of SR proteins abrogates the effect of CE1, the presence of CE1 does not modify U1 snRNP binding to competing 5' splice sites, as judged by oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H protection assays. Our results suggest that hnRNP A1 modulates splice site selection on its own pre-mRNA without changing the binding of U1 snRNP to competing 5' splice sites.  相似文献   

9.
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by loss of motor neurons in patients with null mutations in the SMN1 gene. An almost identical SMN2 gene is unable to compensate for this deficiency because a single C‐to‐T transition at position +6 in exon‐7 causes skipping of the exon by a mechanism not yet fully elucidated. We observed that the C‐to‐T transition in SMN2 creates a putative binding site for the RNA‐binding protein Sam68. RNA pull‐down assays and UV‐crosslink experiments showed that Sam68 binds to this sequence. In vivo splicing assays showed that Sam68 triggers SMN2 exon‐7 skipping. Moreover, mutations in the Sam68‐binding site of SMN2 or in the RNA‐binding domain of Sam68 completely abrogated its effect on exon‐7 skipping. Retroviral infection of dominant‐negative mutants of Sam68 that interfere with its RNA‐binding activity, or with its binding to the splicing repressor hnRNP A1, enhanced exon‐7 inclusion in endogenous SMN2 and rescued SMN protein expression in fibroblasts of SMA patients. Our results thus indicate that Sam68 is a novel crucial regulator of SMN2 splicing.  相似文献   

10.
Spinal muscular atrophy is a genetic disease in which the SMN1 gene is deleted. The SMN2 gene exists in all of the patients. Alternative splicing of these two genes are different. More than 90% of exon 7 included form is produced from SMN1 pre-mRNA, whereas only ~20% of exon 7 included form is produced from SMN2 pre-mRNA. Only exon 7 inclusion form produces functional protein. Exon 7 skipped SMN isoform is unstable. Here we constructed a GFP reporter system that recapitulates the alternative splicing of SMN1 and SMN2 pre-mRNA. We designed a system in which GFP protein is expressed only when exon 7 of is included in alternative splicing. The stable cell that expresses SMN1-GFP produces ~4 times more GFP protein than the stable cell line that expresses SMN2-GFP; as demonstrated by microscopy, FACS analysis and immunoblotting. In addition the ratio of exon 7 inclusion and skipping of SMN1-GFP and SMN2-GFP pre-mRNA was similar to endogenous SMN1 and SMN2 pre-mRNA as shown in RT-PCR. Furthermore the knockdown with hnRNP A1 shRNA, a known protein which promotes exon 7 skipping of SMN2, induces exon 7 inclusion of exon 7 in SMN2-GFP pre-mRNA in SMN2-GFP cell line. We conclude that we have established the stable cell lines that recapitulate alternative splicing of the SMN1 and SMN2 genes. The stable cell line can be used to identify the trans-acting elements with siRNA.  相似文献   

11.
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by loss of motor neurons in patients with null mutations in the SMN1 gene. The almost identical SMN2 gene is unable to compensate for this deficiency because of the skipping of exon 7 during pre–messenger RNA (mRNA) processing. Although several splicing factors can modulate SMN2 splicing in vitro, the physiological regulators of this disease-causing event are unknown. We found that knockout of the splicing factor SAM68 partially rescued body weight and viability of SMAΔ7 mice. Ablation of SAM68 function promoted SMN2 splicing and expression in SMAΔ7 mice, correlating with amelioration of SMA-related defects in motor neurons and skeletal muscles. Mechanistically, SAM68 binds to SMN2 pre-mRNA, favoring recruitment of the splicing repressor hnRNP A1 and interfering with that of U2AF65 at the 3′ splice site of exon 7. These findings identify SAM68 as the first physiological regulator of SMN2 splicing in an SMA mouse model.  相似文献   

12.
Signal-dependent alternative splicing is important for regulating gene expression in eukaryotes, yet our understanding of how signals impact splicing mechanisms is limited. A model to address this issue is alternative splicing of Drosophila TAF1 pre-mRNA in response to camptothecin (CPT)-induced DNA damage signals. CPT treatment of Drosophila S2 cells causes increased inclusion of TAF1 alternative cassette exons 12a and 13a through an ATR signaling pathway. To evaluate the role of TAF1 pre-mRNA sequences in the alternative splicing mechanism, we developed a TAF1 minigene (miniTAF1) and an S2 cell splicing assay that recapitulated key aspects of CPT-induced alternative splicing of endogenous TAF1. Analysis of miniTAF1 indicated that splice site strength underlies independent and distinct mechanisms that control exon 12a and 13a inclusion. Mutation of the exon 13a weak 5' splice site or weak 3' splice site to a consensus sequence was sufficient for constitutive exon 13a inclusion. In contrast, mutation of the exon 12a strong 5' splice site or moderate 3' splice site to a consensus sequence was only sufficient for constitutive exon 12a inclusion in the presence of CPT-induced signals. Analogous studies of the exon 13 3' splice site suggest that exon 12a inclusion involves signal-dependent pairing between constitutive and alternative splice sites. Finally, intronic elements identified by evolutionary conservation were necessary for full repression of exon 12a inclusion or full activation of exon 13a inclusion and may be targets of CPT-induced signals. In summary, this work defines the role of sequence elements in the regulation of TAF1 alternative splicing in response to a DNA damage signal.  相似文献   

13.
We have previously shown that the calcitonin (CT)-encoding exon 4 of the human calcitonin/calcitonin gene-related peptide I (CGRP-I) gene (CALC-I gene) is surrounded by suboptimal processing sites. At the 5' end of exon 4 a weak 3' splice site is present because of an unusual branch acceptor nucleotide (U) and a weak poly(A) site is present at the 3' end of exon 4. For CT-specific RNA processing two different exon enhancer elements, A and B, located within exon 4 are required. In this study we have investigated the cooperation of these elements in CT exon recognition and inclusion by transient transfection into 293 cells of CALC-I minigene constructs. Improvement of the strength of the 3' splice site in front of exon 4 by the branchpoint mutation U-->A reduces the requirement for the presence of exon enhancer elements within exon 4 for CT-specific RNA processing, irrespective of the length of exon 4. Replacement of the exon 4 poly(A) site with a 5' splice site does not result in CT exon recognition, unless also one or more exon enhancer elements and/or the branchpoint mutation U-->A in front of exon 4 are present. This indicates that terminal and internal exons are recognised in a similar fashion. The number of additional enhancing elements that are required for CT exon recognition depends on the strength of the 5' splice site. Deletion of a large part of intron 4 also leads to partial exon 4 skipping. All these different elements contribute to CT exon recognition and inclusion. The CT exon is recognised as a whole entity and the sum of the strengths of the different elements determines recognition as an exon. Curiously, in one of our constructs a 5' splice site at the end of exon 4 is either ignored by the splicing machinery of the cell or recognised as a splice donor or as a splice acceptor site.  相似文献   

14.
Prevention of skipping of exon 7 during pre-mRNA splicing of Survival Motor Neuron 2 (SMN2) holds the promise for cure of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a leading genetic cause of infant mortality. Here, we report T-cell-restricted intracellular antigen 1 (TIA1) and TIA1-related (TIAR) proteins as intron-associated positive regulators of SMN2 exon 7 splicing. We show that TIA1/TIAR stimulate exon recognition in an entirely novel context in which intronic U-rich motifs are separated from the 5' splice site by overlapping inhibitory elements. TIA1 and TIAR are modular proteins with three N-terminal RNA recognition motifs (RRMs) and a C-terminal glutamine-rich (Q-rich) domain. Our results reveal that any one RRM in combination with a Q domain is necessary and sufficient for TIA1-associated regulation of SMN2 exon 7 splicing in vivo. We also show that increased expression of TIA1 counteracts the inhibitory effect of polypyrimidine tract binding protein, a ubiquitously expressed factor recently implicated in regulation of SMN exon 7 splicing. Our findings expand the scope of TIA1/TIAR in genome-wide regulation of alternative splicing under normal and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by the homozygous loss of survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1). SMN2, a nearly identical copy gene, differs from SMN1 only by a single nonpolymorphic C to T transition in exon 7, which leads to alteration of exon 7 splicing; SMN2 leads to exon 7 skipping and expression of a nonfunctional gene product and fails to compensate for the loss of SMN1. The exclusion of SMN exon 7 is critical for the onset of this disease. Regulation of SMN exon 7 splicing was determined by analyzing the roles of the cis-acting element in intron 7 (element 2), which we previously identified as a splicing enhancer element of SMN exon 7 containing the C to T transition. The minimum sequence essential for activation of the splicing was determined to be 24 nucleotides, and RNA structural analyses showed a stem-loop structure. Deletion of this element or disruption of the stem-loop structure resulted in a decrease in exon 7 inclusion. A gel shift assay using element 2 revealed formation of RNA-protein complexes, suggesting that the binding of the trans-acting proteins to element 2 plays a crucial role in the splicing of SMN exon 7 containing the C to T transition.  相似文献   

16.
SMN1 and SMN2 represent the two nearly identical copies of the survival of motor neuron gene in humans. The most frequent cause of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is loss of SMN1 accompanied by the inability of SMN2 to compensate due to an inhibitory mutation at position 6 in exon 7 (C6U) that causes exon 7 exclusion. How this single exonic nucleotide regulates exon 7 recognition has been of major interest. Based on score matrices and in vitro assays, abrogation of an exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) associated with SF2/ASF has been considered as the cause of exon 7 exclusion. However, a recent report supports the creation of an exonic splicing silencer (ESS) associated with hnRNP A1 as the determining factor for exon 7 exclusion. Here we show that C6U strengthens an inhibitory context that covers a larger sequence than the hnRNP A1 binding site. The inhibitory context can also be strengthened by the addition of a G residue at the first position of exon 7 in SMN1, promoting exon 7 skipping despite the presence of SF2/ASF binding site. Through in vivo selection and a series of mutations we demonstrate that the strengthening of the extended inhibitory context at the 5' end of exon 7 is exercised through overlapping sequence motifs that collaborate to regulate exon usage.  相似文献   

17.
Humans have two near identical copies of Survival Motor Neuron gene: SMN1 and SMN2. Loss of SMN1 coupled with the predominant skipping of SMN2 exon 7 causes spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a neurodegenerative disease. SMA patient cells devoid of SMN1 provide a powerful system to examine splicing pattern of various SMN2 exons. Until now, similar system to examine splicing of SMN1 exons was unavailable. We have recently screened several patient cell lines derived from various diseases, including SMA, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and Batten disease. Here we report a Batten disease cell line that lacks functional SMN2, as an ideal system to examine pre-mRNA splicing of SMN1. We employ a multiple-exon-skipping detection assay (MESDA) to capture simultaneously skipping of multiple exons. Our results show surprising diversity of splice isoforms and reveal novel splicing events that include skipping of exon 4 and co-skipping of three adjacent exons of SMN. Contrary to the general belief, MESDA captured oxidative-stress induced skipping of SMN1 exon 5 in several cell types, including non-neuronal cells. We further demonstrate that the predominant SMN2 exon 7 skipping induced by oxidative stress is modulated by a combinatorial control that includes promoter sequence, endogenous context, and the weak splice sites. We also show that an 8-mer antisense oligonucleotide blocking a recently described GC-rich sequence prevents SMN2 exon 7 skipping under the conditions of oxidative stress. Our findings bring new insight into splicing regulation of an essential housekeeping gene linked to neurodegeneration and infant mortality.  相似文献   

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Alternative pre-mRNA splicing is a central element of eukaryotic gene expression. Its deregulation can lead to disease, and methods to change splice site selection are developed as potential therapies. Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by the loss of the SMN1 (survival of motoneuron 1) gene. A therapeutic avenue for spinal muscular atrophy treatment is to promote exon 7 inclusion of the almost identical SMN2 (survival of motoneuron 2) gene. The splicing factor tra2-beta1 promotes inclusion of this exon and is antagonized by protein phosphatase (PP) 1. To identify new compounds that promote exon 7 inclusion, we synthesized analogs of cantharidin, an inhibitor of PP1, and PP2A. Three classes of compounds emerged from these studies. The first class blocks PP1 and PP2A activity, blocks constitutive splicing in vitro, and promotes exon 7 inclusion in vivo. The second class has no measurable effect on PP1 activity but activates PP2A. This class represents the first compounds described with these properties. These compounds cause a dephosphorylation of Thr-33 of tra2-beta1, which promotes exon 7 inclusion. The third class had no detectable effect on phosphatase activity and could promote exon 7 via allosteric effects. Our data show that subtle changes in similar compounds can turn a phosphatase inhibitor into an activator. These chemically related compounds influence alternative splicing by distinct mechanisms.  相似文献   

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