| Literature DB >> 20163725 |
Adam Labadorf1, Alicia Link, Mark F Rogers, Julie Thomas, Anireddy Sn Reddy, Asa Ben-Hur.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Genome-wide computational analysis of alternative splicing (AS) in several flowering plants has revealed that pre-mRNAs from about 30% of genes undergo AS. Chlamydomonas, a simple unicellular green alga, is part of the lineage that includes land plants. However, it diverged from land plants about one billion years ago. Hence, it serves as a good model system to study alternative splicing in early photosynthetic eukaryotes, to obtain insights into the evolution of this process in plants, and to compare splicing in simple unicellular photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic eukaryotes. We performed a global analysis of alternative splicing in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using its recently completed genome sequence and all available ESTs and cDNAs.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20163725 PMCID: PMC2830987 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Example splice graph. Shown are two splice graphs along with the relevant EST evidence for the gene fgenesh2_pg.C_scaffold_39000087, which exhibits intron retention and Alt3' (top), and for the gene estExt_fgenesh2_kg.C_380020, which exhibits intron retention, exon skipping, and Alt3' (bottom). Figures were generated by Sircah as part of our pipeline.
The prevalence of different types of alternative splicing events.
| Chlamydomonas | Arabidopsis | Rice | |
|---|---|---|---|
| IR | 305 (50.0%) | 4635 (56.1%) | 7774 (53.5%) |
| ES | 73 (11.9%) | 666 (8.1%) | 2004 (13.8%) |
| Alt5' | 71 (11.6%) | 845 (10.2%) | 1642 (11.3%) |
| Alt3' | 158 (25.8%) | 1810 (26.0%) | 2201 (15.5%) |
| AltB | 4 (0.7%) | 308 (3.7%) | 921 (6.3%) |
| Total | 611 | 8264 | 14542 |
This table shows the number and frequency of each type of alternative splicing. Percentage of the total number of events is shown in parentheses. The statistics for Arabidopsis and rice are from [11].
Splice site strength in alternative and constitutive splicing.
| Event | 5' site | 3' site | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intron Retention | 7.790 | 7.492 (6.258e-44) | 7.165 | 6.925 (8.734e-11) |
| Exon Skipping | 6.701 | 6.156 (1.465e-09) | 7.735 | 6.921 (4.402e-12) |
| Alt 5' | 7.304 | 6.373 (7.175e-20) | 7.448 | 7.097 (0.0517) |
| Alt 3' | 8.594 | 8.434 (0.00176) | 5.460 | 3.478 (1.686e-80) |
| Constitutive | 8.822 | N/A | 7.574 | N/A |
Average splice site scores and p-values for alternative splicing events and constitutive splicing are shown here. All scores are computed with respect to the splice site motif of the constitutive splice form, following the protocol used in [29]. In all cases, the scores for the alternatively spliced form are lower than for constitutive splicing. The p-values are based on a comparison of the scores for each type of alternative splicing event with the scores for constitutive splicing, and are computed using the Wilcoxon signed-ranks test. Except for the case of exon skipping, the 5' and 3' sites refer to the splice sites of an excised intron. In exon skipping the 5' and 3' sites are the splice sites flanking the skipped exon.
Splice site strength for prevalent and non-prevalent splice forms.
| AS event | non-prevalent vs prevalent | prevalent vs constitutive | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alt5' | 5.88 | 1.98e-07 | 8.14 | 7.51 | 1.67e-07 | 8.85 |
| Alt3' | 4.17 | 2.30e-12 | 6.73 | 6.31 | 6.95e-18 | 7.57 |
Splice site scores and p-values for the 5' and 3' sites of prevalent and non-prevalent splice forms. The table shows data that support two hypotheses: (i) non-prevalent splice sites are weaker than splice sites associated with the prevalent splice form; (ii) prevalent splice sites are weaker than splice sites associated with constitutive splicing. The "avg. score" columns provide the average score of splice site occurrences. For the comparison of non-prevalent with prevalent splice forms, the scores are computed with respect to a motif model of prevalent instances; for the comparison of prevalent and constitutive splicing the scores are computed with respect to a model of the constitutive splice sites.
Figure 2Comparison of splice site motifs for prevalent and non-prevalent splice forms. WebLogo [58] images of 5' and 3' splice site motifs for the prevalent and non-prevalent Alt5' and Alt3' splice forms. In the case of Alt5' there is a difference between the prevalent and non-prevalent forms only in the 5' splice site, and similarly for Alt3', there is a difference only in the 3' splice site.
The effect of splicing on predicted proteins.
| AS in Coding Sequence | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ORF Shortened By | |||||
| Event | # events | bp | % | AS in UTR # events | Total |
| IR | 30 | 276.52 | 54.52% | 1 | 31 |
| ES | 4 | 270.00 | 59.74% | 0 | 4 |
| Alt5' | 6 | 353.62 | 60.67% | 4 | 11 |
| Alt3' | 22 | 476.32 | 51.37% | 9 | 31 |
| Total/Avg. | 62 | 359.52 | 54.84% | 14 | 77 |
We considered a subset of the clusters with a full-length cDNA, a single alternative splicing event, and a published start codon in the JGI version 4.0 genome annotation. For these clusters we show the number of events in a UTR and the number of events in the coding sequence, where UTRs were detected by the location of where AS occurred with respect to the published start codon and the first stop codon in the reading frame. For events in the coding sequence, we show the average reduction in the length of the predicted ORF that results when comparing the prevalent splice form with the non-prevalent splice form. In all cases but one, the non-prevalent splice form is shorter as a result of a premature termination codon. For IR, the prevalent form is always the one where the intron is spliced, and the non-prevalent form retains the intron. For ES, the prevalent form always contained the exon while the non-prevalent form skipped it.
Figure 3Analysis of ornithine decarboxylase 1 (ODC1) and asparagine synthase (ASyn) splice variants in Chlamydomonas using RT-PCR. A) DNAase-treated RNA was used in PCR with ODC1 primers. B) cDNA amplified with ODC1 primers. An asterisk indicates the spliced form for the full-length protein. Numbers on the right indicate amplified product size in Kb. C) cDNA amplified with ASyn primers. Numbers on the right indicate amplified product size in Kb. D) Diagram showing splicing events in six splice variants (left) and predicted proteins (right) for ODC1. Gene is indicated on top and all six splice variants are shown under the gene. Black boxes indicate constitutively spliced exons and red boxes indicate the included regions in different isoforms. Asterisk indicates the position of translation termination codon. Isoforms 1 to 6 correspond to the bottom to top bands in 3B. The number next to each predicted protein indicates the length of the protein. Conserved signature motifs in ODC1 are represented as green boxes in the full-length protein. Red, blue and magenta colors in truncated proteins represent amino acids unique to them. E) Diagram showing splicing events in four splice variants (left) and predicted proteins (right) for the gene ASyn. The representation of the gene and its splice variants is the same as in D. A conserved domain in ASyn is shown in pink. The green region in isoform 4 represents a unique sequence.