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1.
Apolipoprotein E receptor 2 (Apoer2), a member of the LDL receptor gene family, and its ligand Reelin control neuronal migration during brain development. Apoer2 is also essential for induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) in the adult brain. Here we show that Apoer2 is present in the postsynaptic densities of excitatory synapses where it forms a functional complex with NMDA receptors. Reelin signaling through Apoer2 markedly enhances LTP through a mechanism that requires the presence of amino acids encoded by an exon in the intracellular domain of Apoer2. This exon is alternatively spliced in an activity-dependent manner and is required for Reelin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of NMDA receptor subunits. Mice constitutively lacking the exon perform poorly in learning and memory tasks. Thus, alternative splicing of Apoer2, a novel component of the NMDA receptor complex, controls the modulation of NMDA receptor activity, synaptic neurotransmission, and memory by Reelin.  相似文献   

2.
《Gene》1996,168(2):217-221
We have isolated 52 mouse cardiac troponin-T-encoding cDNA clones (TnT) by specific antibody screening of a λZAPII expression library. Sequencing data from the large sample of independent cDNAs demonstrated relationships among the expression of four alternatively-spliced exons of the cardiac TnT gene, producing seven classes of cDNAs encoding four protein isoforms differing in two variable regions. In the N-terminal variable region and next to the embryonic-specific exon 4, an alternatively spliced exon 3a was identified in 20% of the adult isoforms. The alternatively spliced exon 12, corresponding to a central variable region between the two functional domains of TnT, was found in approx. 79% of the 52 mouse cardiac TnT cDNAs with a single base mutation completely abolishing the splicing at an internal acceptor site. Three novel alternative splicing acceptor sites in the 5'-untranslated portion of exon 2 have been identified with different frequencies.  相似文献   

3.
Jelen N  Ule J  Zivin M  Darnell RB 《PLoS genetics》2007,3(10):1838-1847
A large number of alternative exons are spliced with tissue-specific patterns, but little is known about how such patterns have evolved. Here, we study the conservation of the neuron-specific splicing factors Nova1 and Nova2 and of the alternatively spliced exons they regulate in mouse brain. Whereas Nova RNA binding domains are 94% identical across vertebrate species, Nova-dependent splicing silencer and enhancer elements (YCAY clusters) show much greater divergence, as less than 50% of mouse YCAY clusters are conserved at orthologous positions in the zebrafish genome. To study the relation between the evolution of tissue-specific splicing and YCAY clusters, we compared the brain-specific splicing of Nova-regulated exons in zebrafish, chicken, and mouse. The presence of YCAY clusters in lower vertebrates invariably predicted conservation of brain-specific splicing across species, whereas their absence in lower vertebrates correlated with a loss of alternative splicing. We hypothesize that evolution of Nova-regulated splicing in higher vertebrates proceeds mainly through changes in cis-acting elements, that tissue-specific splicing might in some cases evolve in a single step corresponding to evolution of a YCAY cluster, and that the conservation level of YCAY clusters relates to the functions encoded by the regulated RNAs.  相似文献   

4.
The vertebrate Slit gene family currently consists of three members; Slit1, Slit2 and Slit3. Each gene encodes a protein containing multiple epidermal growth factor and leucine rich repeat motifs, which are likely to have importance in cell-cell interactions. In this study, we sought to fully define and characterise the vertebrate Slit gene family. Using long distance PCR coupled with in silico mapping, we determined the genomic structure of all three Slit genes in mouse and man. Analysis of EST and genomic databases revealed no evidence of further Slit family members in either organism. All three Slit genes were encoded by 36 (Slit3) or 37 (Slit1 and Slit2) exons covering at least 143 kb or 183 kb of mouse or human genomic DNA respectively. Two additional potential leucine-rich repeat encoding exons were identified within intron 12 of Slit2. These could be inserted in frame, suggesting that alternate splicing may occur in Slit2. A search for STS sequences within human Slit3 anchored this gene to D5S2075 at the 5' end (exon 4) and SGC32449 within the 3' UTR, suggesting that Slit3 may cover greater than 693 kb. The genomic structure of all Slit genes demonstrated considerable modularity in the placement of exon-intron boundaries such that individual leucine-rich repeat motifs were encoded by individual 72 bp exons. This further implies the potential generation of multiple Slit protein isoforms varying in their number of repeat units. cDNA library screening and EST database searching verified that such alternate splicing does occur.  相似文献   

5.
The mouse gene encoding the mu opioid receptor, Oprm, undergoes extensive alternatively splicing, with 14 variants having been identified. However, only one variant of human mu opioid receptor gene (Oprm), MOR-1A, has been described. We now report two novel splice variants of the human Oprm gene, hMOR-1O and hMOR-1X. The full-length cDNAs of hMOR-1O and hMO-1X contained the same exons 1, 2, and 3 as the original hMOR-1, but with exon O or exon X as the alternative fourth exon, respectively. Northern blots revealed several bands with the exon O probe in both human neuroblastoma BE(2)C cells and human brain and a single band (5.5kb) with the exon X probe in selected human brain regions. When transfected into CHO cells, both variants showed high selectivity for mu opioids in binding assays. These two new human mu opioid receptors are the first human MOR-1 variants containing new exons and suggest that the complex splicing present in mice may extend to humans.  相似文献   

6.
Yamada K  Nomura N  Yamano A  Yamada Y  Wakamatsu N 《Gene》2012,492(1):270-275
PLEKHA5 (pleckstrin homology domain-containing protein family A, member 5) belongs to the PLEKHA family (PLEKHA1-6); however, the properties of this protein remain poorly characterized. We have identified and characterized two forms of PLEKHA5 mRNA. The long form of PLEKHA5 (L-PLEKHA5) contains 32 exons, encodes 1282 amino acids, and is specifically expressed in the brain; the short form of PLEKHA5 (S-PLEKHA5) is generated by alternative splicing of L-PLEKHA5, contains 26 exons, encodes 1116 amino acids, and is ubiquitously expressed. Both forms of the protein contain putative Trp-Trp (WW) and pleckstrin homology (PH) domains and are located mainly in the cytosol. Developmental and age-dependent expression studies in the mouse brain have shown that Plekha5 is the most abundantly expressed protein at E13.5 with S-Plekha5 dominancy. L-Plekha5 levels increased gradually with the decrease in total Plekha5 levels; moreover, L-Plekha5 became the dominant protein at E17.5, maintaining its dominance throughout adulthood. Protein-lipid overlay assays have indicated that the PH domain of PLEKHA5 specifically interacts with PI3P, PI4P, PI5P, and PI(3,5)P2. These results suggest that the S- to L-conversion of PLEKHA5 (Plekha5) may play an important role in brain development through association with specific phosphoinositides.  相似文献   

7.
《Gene》1997,193(1):105-114
Large samples of original cDNAs encoding neonatal and adult mouse fast skeletal muscle troponin T (fTnT) have been isolated and characterized. The results demonstrate expression relationships of 8 alternatively spliced exons of the fTnT gene and reveal the primary structure of as many as 13 fTnT isoforms that diverge into acidic and basic classes due to differential mRNA splicing in the N-terminal variable region. In the C-terminal variable region encoded by the mutually exclusive exons 16 and 17, the splicing pathway and structure of exon 16 appears to be adult fTnT-specific, suggesting an adaptation to the functional demands of mature fast skeletal muscle. The cloned cDNAs were expressed in E. coli as standards to identify a high Mr to low Mr, acidic to basic fTnT isoform transition in postnatal developing skeletal muscles. Different from the developmental cardiac TnT switch generated by alternative splicing of a single exon, the fTnT isoform transition is an additive effect of alternative splicing of multiple N-terminal-coding exons, especially exons 4, 8 and fetal that are expressed at higher frequencies in the neonatal than in the adult muscle. The developmental fTnT isoform primary structure transition in both N- and C-terminal variable regions suggest a physiological importance of the apparently complex TnT isoform expression.  相似文献   

8.
Alternative splicing amplifies the information content of the genome, creating multiple mRNA isoforms from single genes. The evolutionarily conserved splicing activator Tra2β (Sfrs10) is essential for mouse embryogenesis and implicated in spermatogenesis. Here we find that Tra2β is up-regulated as the mitotic stem cell containing population of male germ cells differentiate into meiotic and post-meiotic cells. Using CLIP coupled to deep sequencing, we found that Tra2β binds a high frequency of exons and identified specific G/A rich motifs as frequent targets. Significantly, for the first time we have analysed the splicing effect of Sfrs10 depletion in vivo by generating a conditional neuronal-specific Sfrs10 knock-out mouse (Sfrs10(fl/fl); Nestin-Cre(tg/+)). This mouse has defects in brain development and allowed correlation of genuine physiologically Tra2β regulated exons. These belonged to a novel class which were longer than average size and importantly needed multiple cooperative Tra2β binding sites for efficient splicing activation, thus explaining the observed splicing defects in the knockout mice. Regulated exons included a cassette exon which produces a meiotic isoform of the Nasp histone chaperone that helps monitor DNA double-strand breaks. We also found a previously uncharacterised poison exon identifying a new pathway of feedback control between vertebrate Tra2 proteins. Both Nasp-T and the Tra2a poison exon are evolutionarily conserved, suggesting they might control fundamental developmental processes. Tra2β protein isoforms lacking the RRM were able to activate specific target exons indicating an additional functional role as a splicing co-activator. Significantly the N-terminal RS1 domain conserved between flies and humans was essential for the splicing activator function of Tra2β. Versions of Tra2β lacking this N-terminal RS1 domain potently repressed the same target exons activated by full-length Tra2β protein.  相似文献   

9.
Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is a multi-systemic disorder caused by a CTG trinucleotide repeat expansion (CTG(exp)) in the DMPK gene. In skeletal muscle, nuclear sequestration of the alternative splicing factor muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) explains the majority of the alternative splicing defects observed in the HSA(LR) transgenic mouse model which expresses a pathogenic range CTG(exp). In the present study, we addressed the possibility that MBNL1 sequestration by CUG(exp) RNA also contributes to splicing defects in the mammalian brain. We examined RNA from the brains of homozygous Mbnl1(ΔE3/ΔE3) knockout mice using splicing-sensitive microarrays. We used RT-PCR to validate a subset of alternative cassette exons identified by microarray analysis with brain tissues from Mbnl1(ΔE3/ΔE3) knockout mice and post-mortem DM1 patients. Surprisingly, splicing-sensitive microarray analysis of Mbnl1(ΔE3/ΔE3) brains yielded only 14 candidates for mis-spliced exons. While we confirmed that several of these splicing events are perturbed in both Mbnl1 knockout and DM1 brains, the extent of splicing mis-regulation in the mouse model was significantly less than observed in DM1. Additionally, several alternative exons, including Grin1 exon 4, App exon 7 and Mapt exons 3 and 9, which have previously been reported to be aberrantly spliced in human DM1 brain, were spliced normally in the Mbnl1 knockout brain. The sequestration of MBNL1 by CUG(exp) RNA results in some of the aberrant splicing events in the DM1 brain. However, we conclude that other factors, possibly other MBNL proteins, likely contribute to splicing mis-regulation in the DM1 brain.  相似文献   

10.
Alternative splicing greatly contributes to the structural and functional diversity of voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs) by generating various isoforms with unique functional and pharmacological properties. Here, we identified a new optional exon 23 located in the linker between domains II and III, and four mutually exclusive exons (exons 27A, 27B, 27C, and 27D) in domains IIIS3 and IIIS4 of the sodium channel of Liposcelis bostrychophila (termed as LbVGSC). This suggested that more alternative splicing phenomena remained to be discovered in VGSCs. Inclusion of exon 27C might lead to generation of non-functional isoforms. Meanwhile, identification of three alternative exons (exons 11, 13A, and 13B), which were located in the linker between domains II and III, indicated that abundant splicing events occurred in the DSC1 ortholog channel of L. bostrychophila (termed as LbSC1). Exons 13A and 13B were generated by intron retention, and the presence of exon 13B relied on the inclusion of exon 13A. Exon 13B was specifically expressed in the embryonic stage and contained an in-frame stop codon, inclusion of which led to generation of truncated proteins with only the first two domains. Additionally, several co-occurring RNA editing events were identified in LbSC1. Furthermore, remarkable similarity between the structure and expression patterns of LbVGSC and LbSC1 were discovered, and a closer evolutionary relationship between VGSCs and DSC1 orthologs was verified. Taken together, the data provided abundant molecular information on VGSC and DSC1 orthologs in L. bostrychophila, a representative Psocoptera storage pest, and insights into the alternative splicing of these two channels.  相似文献   

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Distal intraexon (iE) regulatory elements in 4.1R pre-mRNA govern 3' splice site choice at exon 2 (E2) via nested splicing events, ultimately modulating expression of N-terminal isoforms of cytoskeletal 4.1R protein. Here we explored intrasplicing in other normal and disease gene contexts and found conservation of intrasplicing through vertebrate evolution. In the paralogous 4.1B gene, we identified ~120 kb upstream of E2 an ultradistal intraexon, iE(B), that mediates intrasplicing by promoting two intricately coupled splicing events that ensure selection of a weak distal acceptor at E2 (E2dis) by prior excision of the competing proximal acceptor (E2prox). Mutating iE(B) in minigene splicing reporters abrogated intrasplicing, as did blocking endogenous iE(B) function with antisense morpholinos in live mouse and zebrafish animal models. In a human elliptocytosis patient with a mutant 4.1R gene lacking E2 through E4, we showed that aberrant splicing is consistent with iE(R)-mediated intrasplicing at the first available exons downstream of iE(R), namely, alternative E5 and constitutive E6. Finally, analysis of heterologous acceptor contexts revealed a strong preference for nested 3' splice events at consecutive pairs of AG dinucleotides. Distal regulatory elements may control intrasplicing at a subset of alternative 3' splice sites in vertebrate pre-mRNAs to generate proteins with functional diversity.  相似文献   

17.
 A cDNA encoding a new secretory form of mouse membrane cofactor protein (MCP, CD46) was identified additionally to the membrane form cDNA. The secretory MCP, predicted from the cDNA sequence, consisted of the conserved four short consensus repeats (SCRs) plus a four amino acid-stretch. Unlike human MCP which comprises many isoforms, mouse MCP cDNA predicted a single isoform of membrane MCP with cytoplasmic tail 1 (CYT1) and serine/threonine-rich domain C (STC). To clarify the genomic origin and monomorphic alteration of these cDNAs, we cloned and analyzed a mouse genomic DNA harboring the full coding sequence of MCP from a 129/SV mouse genomic library. The mouse Mcp was a single gene ∼50 kilobases long. Eleven of the 14 coding exons of the human MCP gene and intron-exon boundary sequences were found to be conserved in the mouse gene. The STC homologue but not the STA or STB homologue in the mouse exons was functional: the latter being due to deletions and lack of consensus sequences for splicing. The sequence equivalent to cytoplasmic tail 2 (CYT2) has not been identified in the Mcp genome. Thus, the three exons (STA, STB, and probably CYT2) responsible for the polymorphism of human MCP by differential splicing were missing in the mouse Mcp gene. Unlike the case in humans, no Mcp-related genes or pseudogenes were observed in the mouse genome. The single mouse Mcp gene was mapped to the R-positive H5 band of mouse Chromosome 1 by FISH. Strikingly, one alternative exon with 73 base pairs (encoding the four new amino acids and a TGA stop codon) was discovered between the SCRIV and the STC exons; alternative splicing causes the generation of the secretory form of mouse MCP. These results on mouse MCP, together with the information concerning other mouse SCR proteins, infer that the regulator of complement activation (RCA) gene cluster is genetically diverged between humans and mice. Received: 22 April 1999 / Revised: 21 June 1999  相似文献   

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The incomplete correlation between the organismal complexities and the number of genes among eukaryotic organisms can be partially explained by multiple protein products of a gene created by alternative splicing. One type of alternative splicing involves alternative selection of mutually exclusive exons and creates protein products with substitution of one segment of the amino acid sequence for another. To elucidate the evolution of the mutually exclusive 115-bp exons, designated flip and flop, of vertebrate AMPA receptor genes, the gene structures of chordate (tunicate, cephalochordate, and vertebrate) and protostome (Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans) AMPA receptor subunits were compared. Phylogenetic analysis supports that the vertebrate flip and flop exons evolved from a common sequence. Flip and flop exons exist in all vertebrate AMPA receptor genes but only one 115-bp exon is present in the genes of tunicates and cephalochordates, suggesting that the exon duplication event occurred at the ancestral vertebrate AMPA receptor gene after the separation of vertebrates from primitive chordates. The structures of animal AMPA receptor genes also suggest that an intron insertion to separate the primordial flip/flop exon from the M4-coding exon occurred before the exon duplication event and probably at the chordate lineage. [Reviewing Editor: Dr. Manyuan Long]  相似文献   

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