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Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals

Recently, thanks to the increasing throughput of new technologies, we have begun to explore the full extent of alternative pre–mRNA splicing (AS) in the human transcriptome. This is unveiling a vast layer of complexity in isoform-level expression differences between individuals. We used previously p...

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Autores principales: Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin, Lam, Kevin C. L., Dias, Christel, Majewski, Jacek
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20011102
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000766
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author Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin
Lam, Kevin C. L.
Dias, Christel
Majewski, Jacek
author_facet Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin
Lam, Kevin C. L.
Dias, Christel
Majewski, Jacek
author_sort Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin
collection PubMed
description Recently, thanks to the increasing throughput of new technologies, we have begun to explore the full extent of alternative pre–mRNA splicing (AS) in the human transcriptome. This is unveiling a vast layer of complexity in isoform-level expression differences between individuals. We used previously published splicing sensitive microarray data from lymphoblastoid cell lines to conduct an in-depth analysis on splicing efficiency of known and predicted exons. By combining publicly available AS annotation with a novel algorithm designed to search for AS, we show that many real AS events can be detected within the usually unexploited, speculative majority of the array and at significance levels much below standard multiple-testing thresholds, demonstrating that the extent of cis-regulated differential splicing between individuals is potentially far greater than previously reported. Specifically, many genes show subtle but significant genetically controlled differences in splice-site usage. PCR validation shows that 42 out of 58 (72%) candidate gene regions undergo detectable AS, amounting to the largest scale validation of isoform eQTLs to date. Targeted sequencing revealed a likely causative SNP in most validated cases. In all 17 incidences where a SNP affected a splice-site region, in silico splice-site strength modeling correctly predicted the direction of the micro-array and PCR results. In 13 other cases, we identified likely causative SNPs disrupting predicted splicing enhancers. Using Fst and REHH analysis, we uncovered significant evidence that 2 putative causative SNPs have undergone recent positive selection. We verified the effect of five SNPs using in vivo minigene assays. This study shows that splicing differences between individuals, including quantitative differences in isoform ratios, are frequent in human populations and that causative SNPs can be identified using in silico predictions. Several cases affected disease-relevant genes and it is likely some of these differences are involved in phenotypic diversity and susceptibility to complex diseases.
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spelling pubmed-27807032009-12-15 Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin Lam, Kevin C. L. Dias, Christel Majewski, Jacek PLoS Genet Research Article Recently, thanks to the increasing throughput of new technologies, we have begun to explore the full extent of alternative pre–mRNA splicing (AS) in the human transcriptome. This is unveiling a vast layer of complexity in isoform-level expression differences between individuals. We used previously published splicing sensitive microarray data from lymphoblastoid cell lines to conduct an in-depth analysis on splicing efficiency of known and predicted exons. By combining publicly available AS annotation with a novel algorithm designed to search for AS, we show that many real AS events can be detected within the usually unexploited, speculative majority of the array and at significance levels much below standard multiple-testing thresholds, demonstrating that the extent of cis-regulated differential splicing between individuals is potentially far greater than previously reported. Specifically, many genes show subtle but significant genetically controlled differences in splice-site usage. PCR validation shows that 42 out of 58 (72%) candidate gene regions undergo detectable AS, amounting to the largest scale validation of isoform eQTLs to date. Targeted sequencing revealed a likely causative SNP in most validated cases. In all 17 incidences where a SNP affected a splice-site region, in silico splice-site strength modeling correctly predicted the direction of the micro-array and PCR results. In 13 other cases, we identified likely causative SNPs disrupting predicted splicing enhancers. Using Fst and REHH analysis, we uncovered significant evidence that 2 putative causative SNPs have undergone recent positive selection. We verified the effect of five SNPs using in vivo minigene assays. This study shows that splicing differences between individuals, including quantitative differences in isoform ratios, are frequent in human populations and that causative SNPs can be identified using in silico predictions. Several cases affected disease-relevant genes and it is likely some of these differences are involved in phenotypic diversity and susceptibility to complex diseases. Public Library of Science 2009-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2780703/ /pubmed/20011102 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000766 Text en Coulombe-Huntington 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
Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin
Lam, Kevin C. L.
Dias, Christel
Majewski, Jacek
Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals
title Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals
title_full Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals
title_fullStr Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals
title_full_unstemmed Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals
title_short Fine-Scale Variation and Genetic Determinants of Alternative Splicing across Individuals
title_sort fine-scale variation and genetic determinants of alternative splicing across individuals
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20011102
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000766
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