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J Zhu  A Mayeda  A R Krainer 《Molecular cell》2001,8(6):1351-1361
SR proteins recognize exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) elements and promote exon use, whereas certain hnRNP proteins bind to exonic splicing silencer (ESS) elements and block exon recognition. We investigated how ESS3 in HIV-1 tat exon 3 blocks splicing promoted by one SR protein (SC35) but not another (SF2/ASF). hnRNP A1 mediates silencing by binding initially to a required high-affinity site in ESS3, which then promotes further hnRNP A1 association with the upstream region of the exon. Both SC35 and SF2/ASF recognize upstream ESE motifs, but only SF2/ASF prevents secondary hnRNP A1 binding, presumably by blocking its cooperative propagation along the exon. The differential antagonism between a negative and two positive regulators exemplifies how inclusion of an alternative exon can be modulated.  相似文献   

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The removal of the second intron in the HIV-1 rev/tat pre-mRNAs, which involves the joining of splice site SD4 to SA7, is inhibited by hnRNP A1 by a mechanism that requires the intronic splicing silencer (ISS) and the exon splicing silencer (ESS3). In this study, we have determined the RNA secondary structure and the hnRNP A1 binding sites within the 3' splice site region by phylogenetic comparison and chemical/enzymatic probing. A biochemical characterization of the RNA/protein complexes demonstrates that hnRNP A1 binds specifically to primarily three sites, the ISS, a novel UAG motif in the exon splicing enhancer (ESE) and the ESS3 element, which are all situated in experimentally supported stem loop structures. A mutational analysis of the ISS region revealed that the core hnRNP A1 binding site directly overlaps with a major branchpoint used in splicing to SA7, thereby providing a direct explanation for the inhibition of U2 snRNP association with the pre-mRNA by hnRNP A1. Binding of hnRNP A1 to the ISS core site is inhibited by RNA structure but strongly stimulated by the exonic silencer, ESS3. Moreover, the ISS also stimulate binding of hnRNP A1 to the exonic splicing regulators ESS3 and the ESE. Our results suggest a model where a network is formed between hnRNP A1 molecules situated at discrete sites in the intron and exon and that these interactions preclude the recognition of essential splicing signals including the branch point.  相似文献   

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Mutually exclusive splicing of exons 6A and 6B from the chicken beta-tropomyosin gene involves numerous regulatory sequences. Previously, we identified a G-rich intronic sequence (S3) downstream of exon 6B. This element consists of six G-rich motifs, mutations of which abolish splicing of exon 6B. In this paper, we investigated the cellular factors that bind to this G-rich element. By using RNA affinity chromatography, we identified heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) A1, the SR proteins ASF/SF2 and SC35, and hnRNP F/H as specific components that are assembled onto the G-rich element. By using hnRNP A1-depleted HeLa nuclear extract and add-back experiments, we show that hnRNP A1 has a negative effect on splicing of exon 6B. In agreement with in vitro data, artificial recruitment of hnRNP A1, as a fusion with the MS2 coat protein, also represses splicing of exon 6B ex vivo. In contrast, ASF/SF2 and SC35 activate splicing of exon 6B. As observed with other systems, hnRNP A1 counteracts the stimulating effect of the SR proteins. Moreover, cross-linking experiments show that both ASF/SF2 and SC35 are able to displace binding of hnRNP A1 to the G-rich element, suggesting that the binding sites for these proteins are overlapping. These data indicate that the G-rich sequence is a composite element that acts as an enhancer or as a silencer, depending on which proteins bind to them.  相似文献   

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Wu Y  Zhang Y  Zhang J 《Genomics》2005,86(3):329-336
Ab initio prediction of functional exon splicing enhancer (ESE) elements based on RNA sequences present a challenge in the evaluation of the functional impacts of human genetic polymorphisms on splicing. To better understand the behavior of ESEs, we studied their distribution in human exons and introns for four known SR protein-binding motifs: SF2/SAF, SC35, SRp40, and SRp55. ESEs are enriched in regions in exons that are close to the splice sites, especially in the region 80 to 120 bases away from the ends of splice acceptor sites. Significant enrichment of ESEs is associated with weak splice acceptor sites but not weak donor sites. ESE density decreases at the 3 ends of long exons. ESEs are also enriched in introns with weak donor or acceptor sites. These characteristics of ESEs may help to predict functional ESE sites in RNA sequences.  相似文献   

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The splicing of the c-src exon N1 is controlled by an intricate combination of positive and negative RNA elements. Most previous work on these sequences focused on intronic elements found upstream and downstream of exon N1. However, it was demonstrated that the 5' half of the N1 exon itself acts as a splicing enhancer in vivo. Here we examine the function of this regulatory element in vitro. We show that a mutation in this sequence decreases splicing of the N1 exon in vitro. Proteins binding to this element were identified as hnRNP A1, hnRNP H, hnRNP F, and SF2/ASF by site-specific cross-linking and immunoprecipitation. The binding of these proteins to the RNA was eliminated by a mutation in the exonic element. The activities of hnRNP A1 and SF2/ASF on N1 splicing were examined by adding purified protein to in vitro splicing reactions. SF2/ASF and another SR protein, SC35, are both able to stimulate splicing of c-src pre-mRNA. However, splicing activation by SF2/ASF is dependent on the N1 exon enhancer element whereas activation by SC35 is not. In contrast to SF2/ASF and in agreement with other systems, hnRNP A1 repressed c-src splicing in vitro. The negative activity of hnRNP A1 on splicing was compared with that of PTB, a protein previously demonstrated to repress splicing in this system. Both proteins repress exon N1 splicing, and both counteract the enhancing activity of the SR proteins. Removal of the PTB binding sites upstream of N1 prevents PTB-mediated repression but does not affect A1-mediated repression. Thus, hnRNP A1 and PTB use different mechanisms to repress c-src splicing. Our results link the activity of these well-known exonic splicing regulators, SF2/ASF and hnRNP A1, to the splicing of an exon primarily controlled by intronic factors.  相似文献   

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The SR protein SRp38 is a general splicing repressor that is activated by dephosphorylation during mitosis and in response to heat shock. Here we describe experiments that provide insights into the mechanism by which SRp38 functions in splicing repression. We first show that SRp38 redistributes and colocalizes with snRNPs, but not with a typical SR protein, SC35, during mitosis and following heat shock. Supporting the functional significance of this association, a micrococcal nuclease-sensitive component, i.e., an snRNP(s), completely rescued heat shock-induced splicing repression in vitro, and purified U1 snRNP did so partially. SRp38 contains an N-terminal RNA binding domain (RBD) and a C-terminal RS domain composed of two subdomains (RS1 and RS2 domains). Unexpectedly, an RS1 deletion mutant derivative specifically inhibited the second step of splicing, while an RS2 deletion mutant retained significant dephosphorylation-dependent repression activity. Using chimeric SRp38/SC35 proteins, we show that SC35-RBD/SRp38-RS can function as a general splicing activator and that the dephosphorylated version can act as a strong splicing repressor. SRp38-RBD/SC35-RS, however, was essentially inactive in these assays. Together, our results help to define the unusual features of SRp38 that distinguish it from other SR proteins.  相似文献   

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hnRNP A1 is a pre-mRNA binding protein that antagonizes the alternative splicing activity of splicing factors SF2/ASF or SC35, causing activation of distal 5' splice sites. The structural requirements for hnRNP A1 function were determined by mutagenesis of recombinant human hnRNP A1. Two conserved Phe residues in the RNP-1 submotif of each of two RNA recognition motifs appear to be involved in specific RNA-protein interactions and are essential for modulating alternative splicing. These residues are not required for general pre-mRNA binding or RNA annealing activity. The C-terminal Gly-rich domain is necessary for alternative splicing activity, for stable RNA binding and for optimal RNA annealing activity. hnRNP A1B, which is an alternatively spliced isoform of hnRNP A1 with a longer Gly-rich domain, binds more strongly to pre-mRNA but has only limited alternative splicing activity. In contrast, hnRNP A2 and B1, which have 68% amino acid identity with hnRNP A1, bind more weakly to pre-mRNA and have stronger splice site switching activities than hnRNP A1. We propose that specific combinations of antagonistic hnRNP A/B and SR proteins are involved in regulating alternative splicing of distinct subsets of cellular premRNAs.  相似文献   

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Exonic splicing enhancers (ESEs) are pre-mRNA cis-acting elements required for splice-site recognition. We previously developed a web-based program called ESEfinder that scores any sequence for the presence of ESE motifs recognized by the human SR proteins SF2/ASF, SRp40, SRp55 and SC35 (http://rulai.cshl.edu/tools/ESE/). Using ESEfinder, we have undertaken a large-scale analysis of ESE motif distribution in human protein-coding genes. Significantly higher frequencies of ESE motifs were observed in constitutive internal protein-coding exons, compared with both their flanking intronic regions and with pseudo exons. Statistical analysis of ESE motif frequency distributions revealed a complex relationship between splice-site strength and increased or decreased frequencies of particular SR protein motifs. Comparison of constitutively and alternatively spliced exons demonstrated slightly weaker splice-site scores, as well as significantly fewer ESE motifs, in the alternatively spliced group. Our results underline the importance of ESE-mediated SR protein function in the process of exon definition, in the context of both constitutive splicing and regulated alternative splicing.  相似文献   

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SR proteins are essential splicing factors involved in the use of both constitutive and alternative exons. We previously showed that the SR proteins SRp20 and ASF/SF2 have antagonistic activities on SRp20 pre-mRNA splicing. SRp20 activates exon 4 recognition in its pre-mRNA, whereas ASF/SF2 inhibits this recognition. In experiments aimed at testing the specificity of SRp20 and ASF/SF2 for exon 4 splicing regulation, we show here that this specificity lies in the RNA binding domains of SRp20 and ASF/SF2 and not in the RS domains. Surprisingly, a deletion of 14 amino acids at the end of ASF/SF2-RBD2 converts ASF/SF2 from an inhibitor to an activator of exon 4 splicing. We found that ASF3 also inhibits exon 4 recognition, thus acting similarly to ASF/SF2, while SC35 activates a cryptic 5' splice site downstream of exon 3 and, in doing so, represses exon 4 use. In contrast, Tra2 and the SR proteins 9G8 and SRp40 do not appear to affect exon 4 splicing.  相似文献   

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The guanosine-adenosine-rich exonic splicing enhancer (GAR ESE) identified in exon 5 of the human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) pre-mRNA activates either an enhancer-dependent 5′ splice site (ss) or 3′ ss in 1-intron reporter constructs in the presence of the SR proteins SF2/ASF2 and SRp40. Characterizing the mode of action of the GAR ESE inside the internal HIV-1 exon 5 we found that this enhancer fulfils a dual splicing regulatory function (i) by synergistically mediating exon recognition through its individual SR protein-binding sites and (ii) by conferring 3′ ss selectivity within the 3′ ss cluster preceding exon 5. Both functions depend upon the GAR ESE, U1 snRNP binding at the downstream 5′ ss D4 and the E42 sequence located between these elements. Therefore, a network of cross-exon interactions appears to regulate splicing of the alternative exons 4a and 5. As the GAR ESE-mediated activation of the upstream 3′ ss cluster also is essential for the processing of intron-containing vpu/env-mRNAs during intermediate viral gene expression, the GAR enhancer substantially contributes to the regulation of viral replication.  相似文献   

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A naturally arising point mutation in the env gene of HIV-1 activates the aberrant inclusion of the cryptic exon 6D into most viral messages, leading to inefficient viral replication. We set out to understand how a single nucleotide substitution could cause such a dramatic change in splicing. We have determined that the exon 6D mutation promotes binding of the SR protein SC35 to the exon. Mutant exon 6D sequences function as a splicing enhancer when inserted into an enhancer-dependent splicing construct. hnRNP H family proteins bind to the enhancer as well; their binding is dependent on the sequence GGGA located just downstream of the point mutation and depletion-- reconstitution studies show that hnRNP H is essential for enhancer activity. A polypurine sequence located further downstream in exon 6D binds SR proteins but acts as an exonic splicing silencer. hnRNP H is required for interaction of U1 snRNP with the enhancer, independent of the point mutation. We propose that SC35 binding to the point mutation region may convert the hnRNP H-U1 snRNP complex into a splicing enhancer.  相似文献   

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