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Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element

In disease-associated genes, the understanding of the functional significance of deep intronic nucleotide variants may represent a difficult challenge. We have previously reported a new disease-causing mechanism that involves an intronic splicing processing element (ISPE) in ATM, composed of adjacen...

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Autores principales: Lewandowska, Marzena A., Stuani, Cristiana, Parvizpur, Alireza, Baralle, Francisco E., Pagani, Franco
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1178006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16030351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki710
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author Lewandowska, Marzena A.
Stuani, Cristiana
Parvizpur, Alireza
Baralle, Francisco E.
Pagani, Franco
author_facet Lewandowska, Marzena A.
Stuani, Cristiana
Parvizpur, Alireza
Baralle, Francisco E.
Pagani, Franco
author_sort Lewandowska, Marzena A.
collection PubMed
description In disease-associated genes, the understanding of the functional significance of deep intronic nucleotide variants may represent a difficult challenge. We have previously reported a new disease-causing mechanism that involves an intronic splicing processing element (ISPE) in ATM, composed of adjacent consensus 5′ and 3′ splice sites. A GTAA deletion within ISPE maintains potential adjacent splice sites, disrupts a non-canonical U1 snRNP interaction and activates an aberrant exon. In this paper, we demonstrate that binding of U1 snRNA through complementarity within a ∼40 nt window downstream of the ISPE prevents aberrant splicing. By selective mutagenesis at the adjacent consensus ISPE splice sites, we show that this effect is not due to a resplicing process occurring at the ISPE. Functional comparison of the ATM mouse counterpart and evaluation of the pre-mRNA splicing intermediates derived from affected cell lines and hybrid minigene assays indicate that U1 snRNP binding at the ISPE interferes with the cryptic acceptor site. Activation of this site results in a stringent 5′–3′ order of intron sequence removal around the cryptic exon. Artificial U1 snRNA loading by complementarity to heterologous exonic sequences represents a potential therapeutic method to prevent the usage of an aberrant CFTR cryptic exon. Our results suggest that ISPE-like intronic elements binding U1 snRNPs may regulate correct intron processing.
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spelling pubmed-11780062005-07-21 Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element Lewandowska, Marzena A. Stuani, Cristiana Parvizpur, Alireza Baralle, Francisco E. Pagani, Franco Nucleic Acids Res Article In disease-associated genes, the understanding of the functional significance of deep intronic nucleotide variants may represent a difficult challenge. We have previously reported a new disease-causing mechanism that involves an intronic splicing processing element (ISPE) in ATM, composed of adjacent consensus 5′ and 3′ splice sites. A GTAA deletion within ISPE maintains potential adjacent splice sites, disrupts a non-canonical U1 snRNP interaction and activates an aberrant exon. In this paper, we demonstrate that binding of U1 snRNA through complementarity within a ∼40 nt window downstream of the ISPE prevents aberrant splicing. By selective mutagenesis at the adjacent consensus ISPE splice sites, we show that this effect is not due to a resplicing process occurring at the ISPE. Functional comparison of the ATM mouse counterpart and evaluation of the pre-mRNA splicing intermediates derived from affected cell lines and hybrid minigene assays indicate that U1 snRNP binding at the ISPE interferes with the cryptic acceptor site. Activation of this site results in a stringent 5′–3′ order of intron sequence removal around the cryptic exon. Artificial U1 snRNA loading by complementarity to heterologous exonic sequences represents a potential therapeutic method to prevent the usage of an aberrant CFTR cryptic exon. Our results suggest that ISPE-like intronic elements binding U1 snRNPs may regulate correct intron processing. Oxford University Press 2005 2005-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC1178006/ /pubmed/16030351 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki710 Text en © The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Article
Lewandowska, Marzena A.
Stuani, Cristiana
Parvizpur, Alireza
Baralle, Francisco E.
Pagani, Franco
Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element
title Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element
title_full Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element
title_fullStr Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element
title_full_unstemmed Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element
title_short Functional studies on the ATM intronic splicing processing element
title_sort functional studies on the atm intronic splicing processing element
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1178006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16030351
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki710
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