AI Article Synopsis

  • Alternative splicing changes how proteins are made from genes, affecting over 95% of multi-exon genes in humans.
  • These changes can influence how proteins interact with other molecules and affect important functions in our body, like brain connections and insulin release.
  • Overall, alternative splicing is really important for making proteins work in different ways, helping evolution, and can even lead to diseases.

Article Abstract

Alternative splicing affects more than 95% of multi-exon genes in the human genome. These changes affect the proteome in a myriad of ways. Here, we review our understanding of the breadth of these changes from their effect on protein structure to their influence on interactions. These changes encompass effects on nucleic acid binding in the nucleus to protein-carbohydrate interactions in the extracellular milieu, altering interactions involving all major classes of biological molecules. Protein isoforms have profound influences on cellular and tissue physiology, for example, by shaping neuronal connections, enhancing insulin secretion by pancreatic beta cells and allowing for alternative viral defense strategies in stem cells. More broadly, alternative splicing enables repurposing proteins from one context to another and thereby contributes to both the evolution of new traits as well as the creation of disease-specific interactomes that drive pathological phenotypes. In this Review, we highlight this universal character of alternative splicing as a central regulator of protein function with implications for almost every biological process.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41594-023-01155-9DOI Listing

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