As a fundamental aspect of normal cell signaling and disease states, there is great interest in determining alternative splicing (AS) changes in physiologic, pathologic, and pharmacologic settings. High throughput RNA sequencing and specialized software to detect AS has greatly enhanced our ability to determine transcriptome-wide splicing changes. Despite the richness of this data, deriving meaning from sometimes thousands of AS events is a substantial bottleneck for most investigators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: B cell activation and differentiation is central to the adaptive immune response. Changes in exon usage can have major impacts on cellular signaling and differentiation but have not been systematically explored in differentiating B cells.
Methods: We analyzed exon usage and intron retention in RNA-Seq data from subsets of human B cells at various stages of differentiation, and in an in vitro laboratory model of B cell activation and differentiation (Epstein Barr virus infection).