The splicing regulatory element, UGCAUG, is phylogenetically and spatially conserved in introns that flank tissue-specific alternative exons

被引:86
作者
Minovitsky, S
Gee, SL
Schokrpur, S
Dubchak, I
Conboy, JG [1 ]
机构
[1] Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Div Life Sci, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[2] Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Genom Div, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1093/nar/gki210
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Previous studies have identified UGCAUG as an intron splicing enhancer that is frequently located adjacent to tissue-specific alternative exons in the human genome. Here, we show that UGCAUG is phylogenetically and spatially conserved in introns that flank brain-enriched alternative exons from fish to man. Analysis of sequence from the mouse, rat, dog, chicken and pufferfish genomes revealed a strongly statistically significant association of UGCAUG with the proximal intron region downstream of brain-enriched alternative exons. The number, position and sequence context of intronic UGCAUG elements were highly conserved among mammals and in chicken, but more divergent in fish. Control datasets, including constitutive exons and non-tissue-specific alternative exons, exhibited a much lower incidence of closely linked UGCAUG elements. We propose that the high sequence specificity of the UGCAUG element, and its unique association with tissue-specific alternative exons, mark it as a critical component of splicing switch mechanism(s) designed to activate a limited repertoire of splicing events in cell type-specific patterns. We further speculate that highly conserved UGCAUG-binding protein(s) related to the recently described Fox-1 splicing factor play a critical role in mediating this specificity.
引用
收藏
页码:714 / 724
页数:11
相关论文
共 47 条
  • [1] Modulation of exon skipping by high-affinity hnRNP A1-binding sites and by intron elements that repress splice site utilization
    Blanchette, M
    Chabot, B
    [J]. EMBO JOURNAL, 1999, 18 (07) : 1939 - 1952
  • [2] Computational analysis of candidate intron regulatory elements for tissue-specific alternative pre-mRNA splicing
    Brudno, M
    Gelfand, MS
    Spengler, S
    Zorn, M
    Dubchak, I
    Conboy, JG
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2001, 29 (11) : 2338 - 2348
  • [3] Alternative splice variants of doublecortin-like kinase are differentially expressed and have different kinase activities
    Burgess, HA
    Reiner, O
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2002, 277 (20) : 17696 - 17705
  • [4] ESEfinder: a web resource to identify exonic splicing enhancers
    Cartegni, L
    Wang, JH
    Zhu, ZW
    Zhang, MQ
    Krainer, AR
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2003, 31 (13) : 3568 - 3571
  • [5] The splicing factors 9G8 and SRp20 transactivate splicing through different and specific enhancers
    Cavaloc, Y
    Bourgeois, CF
    Kister, L
    Stévenin, J
    [J]. RNA, 1999, 5 (03) : 468 - 483
  • [6] Dynamic antagonism between ETR-3 and PTB regulates cell type-specific alternative splicing
    Charlet-B, N
    Logan, P
    Singh, G
    Cooper, TA
    [J]. MOLECULAR CELL, 2002, 9 (03) : 649 - 658
  • [7] Identification of a new class of exonic splicing enhancers by in vivo selection
    Coulter, LR
    Landree, MA
    Cooper, TA
    [J]. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 1997, 17 (04) : 2143 - 2150
  • [8] RESCUE-ESE identifies candidate exonic splicing enhancers in vertebrate exons
    Fairbrother, WG
    Yeo, GW
    Yeh, R
    Goldstein, P
    Mawson, M
    Sharp, PA
    Burge, CB
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2004, 32 : W187 - W190
  • [9] Predictive identification of exonic splicing enhancers in human genes
    Fairbrother, WG
    Yeh, RF
    Sharp, PA
    Burge, CB
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2002, 297 (5583) : 1007 - 1013
  • [10] The splicing regulator TIA-1 interacts with U1-C to promote U1 snRNP recruitment to 5′ splice sites
    Förch, P
    Puig, O
    Martínez, C
    Séraphin, B
    Valcárcel, J
    [J]. EMBO JOURNAL, 2002, 21 (24) : 6882 - 6892