| Literature DB >> 34009296 |
Olivier Saulnier1,2, Katia Guedri-Idjouadiene3,4, Marie-Ming Aynaud1, Alina Chakraborty5,6,7, Jonathan Bruyr3,4, Joséphine Pineau1, Tina O'Grady3,4, Olivier Mirabeau1, Sandrine Grossetête1, Bartimée Galvan3,4, Margaux Claes3,4, Zahra Al Oula Hassoun3,4, Benjamin Sadacca8,9, Karine Laud1, Sakina Zaïdi1, Didier Surdez1, Sylvain Baulande10, Xavier Rambout3,4, Franck Tirode11, Martin Dutertre5,6,7, Olivier Delattre1, Franck Dequiedt3,4.
Abstract
ERG family proteins (ERG, FLI1 and FEV) are a subfamily of ETS transcription factors with key roles in physiology and development. In Ewing sarcoma, the oncogenic fusion protein EWS-FLI1 regulates both transcription and alternative splicing of pre-messenger RNAs. However, whether wild-type ERG family proteins might regulate splicing is unknown. Here, we show that wild-type ERG proteins associate with spliceosomal components, are found on nascent RNAs, and induce alternative splicing when recruited onto a reporter minigene. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that ERG and FLI1 regulate large numbers of alternative spliced exons (ASEs) enriched with RBFOX2 motifs and co-regulated by this splicing factor. ERG and FLI1 are associated with RBFOX2 via their conserved carboxy-terminal domain, which is present in EWS-FLI1. Accordingly, EWS-FLI1 is also associated with RBFOX2 and regulates ASEs enriched in RBFOX2 motifs. However, in contrast to wild-type ERG and FLI1, EWS-FLI1 often antagonizes RBFOX2 effects on exon inclusion. In particular, EWS-FLI1 reduces RBFOX2 binding to the ADD3 pre-mRNA, thus increasing its long isoform, which represses the mesenchymal phenotype of Ewing sarcoma cells. Our findings reveal a RBFOX2-mediated splicing regulatory function of wild-type ERG family proteins, that is altered in EWS-FLI1 and contributes to the Ewing sarcoma cell phenotype.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34009296 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971