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Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals

Splice site selection is a key element of pre-mRNA splicing. Although it is known to involve specific recognition of short consensus sequences by the splicing machinery, the mechanisms by which 5′ splice sites are accurately identified remain controversial and incompletely resolved. The human F7 gen...

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Autores principales: Borensztajn, Keren, Sobrier, Marie-Laure, Duquesnoy, Philippe, Fischer, Anne-Marie, Tapon-Bretaudière, Jacqueline, Amselem, Serge
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1557585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16948532
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0020138
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author Borensztajn, Keren
Sobrier, Marie-Laure
Duquesnoy, Philippe
Fischer, Anne-Marie
Tapon-Bretaudière, Jacqueline
Amselem, Serge
author_facet Borensztajn, Keren
Sobrier, Marie-Laure
Duquesnoy, Philippe
Fischer, Anne-Marie
Tapon-Bretaudière, Jacqueline
Amselem, Serge
author_sort Borensztajn, Keren
collection PubMed
description Splice site selection is a key element of pre-mRNA splicing. Although it is known to involve specific recognition of short consensus sequences by the splicing machinery, the mechanisms by which 5′ splice sites are accurately identified remain controversial and incompletely resolved. The human F7 gene contains in its seventh intron (IVS7) a 37-bp VNTR minisatellite whose first element spans the exon7–IVS7 boundary. As a consequence, the IVS7 authentic donor splice site is followed by several cryptic splice sites identical in sequence, referred to as 5′ pseudo-sites, which normally remain silent. This region, therefore, provides a remarkable model to decipher the mechanism underlying 5′ splice site selection in mammals. We previously suggested a model for splice site selection that, in the presence of consecutive splice consensus sequences, would stimulate exclusively the selection of the most upstream 5′ splice site, rather than repressing the 3′ following pseudo-sites. In the present study, we provide experimental support to this hypothesis by using a mutational approach involving a panel of 50 mutant and wild-type F7 constructs expressed in various cell types. We demonstrate that the F7 IVS7 5′ pseudo-sites are functional, but do not compete with the authentic donor splice site. Moreover, we show that the selection of the 5′ splice site follows a scanning-type mechanism, precluding competition with other functional 5′ pseudo-sites available on immediate sequence context downstream of the activated one. In addition, 5′ pseudo-sites with an increased complementarity to U1snRNA up to 91% do not compete with the identified scanning mechanism. Altogether, these findings, which unveil a cell type–independent 5′−3′-oriented scanning process for accurate recognition of the authentic 5′ splice site, reconciliate apparently contradictory observations by establishing a hierarchy of competitiveness among the determinants involved in 5′ splice site selection.
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spelling pubmed-15575852006-10-05 Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals Borensztajn, Keren Sobrier, Marie-Laure Duquesnoy, Philippe Fischer, Anne-Marie Tapon-Bretaudière, Jacqueline Amselem, Serge PLoS Genet Research Article Splice site selection is a key element of pre-mRNA splicing. Although it is known to involve specific recognition of short consensus sequences by the splicing machinery, the mechanisms by which 5′ splice sites are accurately identified remain controversial and incompletely resolved. The human F7 gene contains in its seventh intron (IVS7) a 37-bp VNTR minisatellite whose first element spans the exon7–IVS7 boundary. As a consequence, the IVS7 authentic donor splice site is followed by several cryptic splice sites identical in sequence, referred to as 5′ pseudo-sites, which normally remain silent. This region, therefore, provides a remarkable model to decipher the mechanism underlying 5′ splice site selection in mammals. We previously suggested a model for splice site selection that, in the presence of consecutive splice consensus sequences, would stimulate exclusively the selection of the most upstream 5′ splice site, rather than repressing the 3′ following pseudo-sites. In the present study, we provide experimental support to this hypothesis by using a mutational approach involving a panel of 50 mutant and wild-type F7 constructs expressed in various cell types. We demonstrate that the F7 IVS7 5′ pseudo-sites are functional, but do not compete with the authentic donor splice site. Moreover, we show that the selection of the 5′ splice site follows a scanning-type mechanism, precluding competition with other functional 5′ pseudo-sites available on immediate sequence context downstream of the activated one. In addition, 5′ pseudo-sites with an increased complementarity to U1snRNA up to 91% do not compete with the identified scanning mechanism. Altogether, these findings, which unveil a cell type–independent 5′−3′-oriented scanning process for accurate recognition of the authentic 5′ splice site, reconciliate apparently contradictory observations by establishing a hierarchy of competitiveness among the determinants involved in 5′ splice site selection. Public Library of Science 2006-09 2006-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1557585/ /pubmed/16948532 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0020138 Text en © 2006 Borensztajn et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Borensztajn, Keren
Sobrier, Marie-Laure
Duquesnoy, Philippe
Fischer, Anne-Marie
Tapon-Bretaudière, Jacqueline
Amselem, Serge
Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals
title Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals
title_full Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals
title_fullStr Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals
title_full_unstemmed Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals
title_short Oriented Scanning Is the Leading Mechanism Underlying 5′ Splice Site Selection in Mammals
title_sort oriented scanning is the leading mechanism underlying 5′ splice site selection in mammals
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1557585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16948532
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.0020138
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