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Genome-wide Analysis of PTB-RNA Interactions Reveals a Strategy Used by the General Splicing Repressor to Modulate Exon Inclusion or Skipping

  • Yuanchao Xue
  • , Yu Zhou
  • , Tongbin Wu
  • , Tuo Zhu
  • , Xiong Ji
  • , Young Soo Kwon
  • , Chao Zhang
  • , Gene Yeo
  • , Douglas L. Black
  • , Hui Sun
  • , Xiang Dong Fu
  • , Yi Zhang
  • Wuhan University
  • University of California
  • University of California at Los Angeles

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

397 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recent transcriptome analysis indicates that > 90% of human genes undergo alternative splicing, underscoring the contribution of differential RNA processing to diverse proteomes in higher eukaryotic cells. The polypyrimidine tract-binding protein PTB is a well-characterized splicing repressor, but PTB knockdown causes both exon inclusion and skipping. Genome-wide mapping of PTB-RNA interactions and construction of a functional RNA map now reveal that dominant PTB binding near a competing constitutive splice site generally induces exon inclusion, whereas prevalent binding close to an alternative site often causes exon skipping. This positional effect was further demonstrated by disrupting or creating a PTB-binding site on minigene constructs and testing their responses to PTB knockdown or overexpression. These findings suggest a mechanism for PTB to modulate splice site competition to produce opposite functional consequences, which may be generally applicable to RNA-binding splicing factors to positively or negatively regulate alternative splicing in mammalian cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)996-1006
Number of pages11
JournalMolecular Cell
Volume36
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Dec 2009
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • DNA
  • RNA

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