| Literature DB >> 28709000 |
Serge Gueroussov1, Robert J Weatheritt2, Dave O'Hanlon3, Zhen-Yuan Lin4, Ashrut Narula5, Anne-Claude Gingras6, Benjamin J Blencowe7.
Abstract
Alternative splicing (AS) patterns have diverged rapidly during vertebrate evolution, yet the functions of most species- and lineage-specific splicing events are not known. We observe that mammalian-specific AS events are enriched in transcript sequences encoding intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) of proteins, in particular those containing glycine/tyrosine repeats that mediate formation of higher-order protein assemblies implicated in gene regulation and human disease. These evolutionary changes impact nearly all members of the hnRNP A and D families of RNA binding proteins. Regulation of these events requires formation of unusual, long-range mammalian-specific RNA duplexes. Differential inclusion of the alternative exons controls the formation of tyrosine-dependent multivalent hnRNP assemblies that, in turn, function to globally regulate splicing. Together, our results demonstrate that AS control of IDR-mediated interactions between hnRNPs represents an important and recurring mechanism underlying splicing regulation. Furthermore, this mechanism has expanded the regulatory capacity of mammalian cells.Entities:
Keywords: alternative splicing; evolution; hnRNP; multivalent assemblies; phase separation; protein disorder
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28709000 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.06.037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582