AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how specific protein factors recognize splice sites in mRNA, particularly highly degenerate ones, by binding to single-stranded exonic splicing motifs while lacking detailed understanding of their secondary structures.
  • Analysis of mouse transcriptomes reveals that retained introns are flanked by a base-paired segment upstream and a single-stranded exonic segment downstream, with upstream loops containing splicing enhancers that are crucial for proper splicing.
  • Substituting or hybridizing these upstream loops hinders splicing, indicating that the structure of exonic segments can regulate alternative splicing by affecting the accessibility of necessary splicing factors.

Article Abstract

Recognition of highly degenerate mammalian splice sites by the core spliceosomal machinery is regulated by several protein factors that predominantly bind exonic splicing motifs. These are postulated to be single-stranded in order to be functional, yet knowledge of secondary structural features that regulate the exposure of exonic splicing motifs across the transcriptome is not currently available. Using transcriptome-wide RNA structural information we show that retained introns in mouse are commonly flanked by a short (≲70 nucleotide), highly base-paired segment upstream and a predominantly single-stranded exonic segment downstream. Splicing assays with select pre-mRNA substrates demonstrate that loops immediately upstream of the introns contain pre-mRNA-specific splicing enhancers, the substitution or hybridization of which impedes splicing. Additionally, the exonic segments flanking the retained introns appeared to be more enriched in a previously identified set of hexameric exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) sequences compared to their spliced counterparts, suggesting that base-pairing in the exonic segments upstream of retained introns could be a means for occlusion of ESEs. The upstream exonic loops of the test substrate promoted recruitment of splicing factors and consequent pre-mRNA structural remodeling, leading up to assembly of the early spliceosome. These results suggest that disruption of exonic stem-loop structures immediately upstream (but not downstream) of the introns regulate alternative splicing events, likely through modulating accessibility of splicing factors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7293017PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaa358DOI Listing

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