| Literature DB >> 31390737 |
Shi-Yi Chen1, Cao Li2, Xianbo Jia2, Song-Jia Lai3.
Abstract
Alternative splicing of pre-mRNAs is a crucial mechanism for maintaining protein diversity in eukaryotes without requiring a considerable increase of genes in the number. Due to rapid advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies and computational algorithms, it is anticipated that alternative splicing events will be more intensively studied to address different kinds of biological questions. The occurrences of alternative splicing mean that all exons could be classified to be either constitutively or alternatively spliced depending on whether they are virtually included into all mature mRNAs. From an evolutionary point of view, therefore, the alternatively spliced exons would have been associated with distinctive biological characteristics in comparison with constitutively spliced exons. In this paper, we first outline the representative types of alternative splicing events and exon classification, and then review sequence and evolutionary features for the alternatively spliced exons. The main purpose is to facilitate understanding of the biological implications of alternative splicing in eukaryotes. This knowledge is also helpful to establish computational approaches for predicting the splicing pattern of exons.Entities:
Keywords: alternative splicing; eukaryotic genes; exon features
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31390737 PMCID: PMC6695735 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20153834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic illustration of alternative splicing events and exon classification. Four representative types of alternative splicing events are demonstrated with a four-exon gene, in which each change is marked by an asterisk (A). The two kinds of exon classification are shown in (B) and (C), which could be accordingly annotated into a Browser Extensible Data (BED)-like file (D). Exons and introns are denoted by the colored boxes and solid lines, respectively. SS—splice site.
Figure 2Splicing signals, recognition models and splicing regulatory elements. The core splicing signals within pre-mRNA and their consensus sequences are schematically illustrated (A). N, any purine or pyrimidine; Y, any pyrimidine; Pu-rich, purine-rich element. (B) The recognition models of spliceosome include “Exon Definition” and “Intron Definition”. The locations and roles of splicing regulatory elements are shown in (C), for which the three-letter abbreviations are stated in the main text. BP—branch point; PPT—polypyrimidine tract; ESS—exonic splicing silencers; ISS—intronic splicing silencers; ESE—exonic splicing enhancers; ISE—intronic splicing enhancers.
Summary of sequence and evolutionary features.
| Items | Summary Description | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Core splicing signals |
Splice sites could be quantified into the strong or weak splicing strength according to their motif sequences. Alternative exons have the weaker strength at variable end(s). Mutations within motifs could affect the splicing pattern. |
| Splicing regulatory elements (SREs) |
Splicing enhancers and silencers play the predominant roles for determining constitutive and alternative splicing, respectively. Distributed density and positions of SREs could affect the splicing pattern. Multiple SREs would function in an additive manner. Mutations within SREs could affect the splicing pattern. | |
| Exon-intron architecture |
Alternative cassette exons are shorter and flanked by the longer introns, which leads to higher intron-to-exon length ratios. Constitutive and alternative exons have differential GC contents at the exon-intron boundaries. Constitutive exons in short length require additional splicing enhancers from the adjacent introns. | |
|
| Origin |
The evolutionary young exons are more likely to be alternatively spliced and have the high inclusion levels only in specific tissue(s). Evolutionary conversion from constitutive to alternative exons is associated with the decreased splicing strength. Changes in exon inclusion level are more likely to be functionally relevant. |
| Selective constraint |
Alternative cassette exons have the faster evolution at amino acid level and higher conservation of nucleotide sequence. Alternative 3′/5′ SS exons have differential selective constraints between the variable and fixed ends. Alternative 3′/5′ SS exons have high symmetry levels for the alternative region between two competitive splice sites. | |
| Regulatory and coding roles |
The evolutionary young exons are more likely located within UTRs and play the regulatory roles. Ancient alternative exons are more likely involved in producing the distinct protein isoforms. |
Figure 3Exon evolutionary ages and inclusion levels. (A) Exon creation as well as loss is first illustrated within an evolutionary tree of three species. Subsequently, six exons are schematically exemplified to show the different evolutionary ages and splicing patterns (B). The inclusion levels of one alternative exon are detected by the spliced mapping of RNA-Seq reads against reference genome (C).