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Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors

Chromatin structure is an important factor in the functional coupling between transcription and mRNA processing, not only by regulating alternative splicing events, but also by contributing to exon recognition during constitutive splicing. We observed that depolarization of neuroblastoma cell membra...

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Autores principales: Schor, Ignacio E., Llères, David, Risso, Guillermo J., Pawellek, Andrea, Ule, Jernej, Lamond, Angus I., Kornblihtt, Alberto R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3495951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23152763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048084
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author Schor, Ignacio E.
Llères, David
Risso, Guillermo J.
Pawellek, Andrea
Ule, Jernej
Lamond, Angus I.
Kornblihtt, Alberto R.
author_facet Schor, Ignacio E.
Llères, David
Risso, Guillermo J.
Pawellek, Andrea
Ule, Jernej
Lamond, Angus I.
Kornblihtt, Alberto R.
author_sort Schor, Ignacio E.
collection PubMed
description Chromatin structure is an important factor in the functional coupling between transcription and mRNA processing, not only by regulating alternative splicing events, but also by contributing to exon recognition during constitutive splicing. We observed that depolarization of neuroblastoma cell membrane potential, which triggers general histone acetylation and regulates alternative splicing, causes a concentration of SR proteins in nuclear speckles. This prompted us to analyze the effect of chromatin structure on splicing factor distribution and dynamics. Here, we show that induction of histone hyper-acetylation results in the accumulation in speckles of multiple splicing factors in different cell types. In addition, a similar effect is observed after depletion of the heterochromatic protein HP1α, associated with repressive chromatin. We used advanced imaging approaches to analyze in detail both the structural organization of the speckle compartment and nuclear distribution of splicing factors, as well as studying direct interactions between splicing factors and their association with chromatin in vivo. The results support a model where perturbation of normal chromatin structure decreases the recruitment efficiency of splicing factors to nascent RNAs, thus causing their accumulation in speckles, which buffer the amount of free molecules in the nucleoplasm. To test this, we analyzed the recruitment of the general splicing factor U2AF65 to nascent RNAs by iCLIP technique, as a way to monitor early spliceosome assembly. We demonstrate that indeed histone hyper-acetylation decreases recruitment of U2AF65 to bulk 3′ splice sites, coincident with the change in its localization. In addition, prior to the maximum accumulation in speckles, ∼20% of genes already show a tendency to decreased binding, while U2AF65 seems to increase its binding to the speckle-located ncRNA MALAT1. All together, the combined imaging and biochemical approaches support a model where chromatin structure is essential for efficient co-transcriptional recruitment of general and regulatory splicing factors to pre-mRNA.
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spelling pubmed-34959512012-11-14 Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors Schor, Ignacio E. Llères, David Risso, Guillermo J. Pawellek, Andrea Ule, Jernej Lamond, Angus I. Kornblihtt, Alberto R. PLoS One Research Article Chromatin structure is an important factor in the functional coupling between transcription and mRNA processing, not only by regulating alternative splicing events, but also by contributing to exon recognition during constitutive splicing. We observed that depolarization of neuroblastoma cell membrane potential, which triggers general histone acetylation and regulates alternative splicing, causes a concentration of SR proteins in nuclear speckles. This prompted us to analyze the effect of chromatin structure on splicing factor distribution and dynamics. Here, we show that induction of histone hyper-acetylation results in the accumulation in speckles of multiple splicing factors in different cell types. In addition, a similar effect is observed after depletion of the heterochromatic protein HP1α, associated with repressive chromatin. We used advanced imaging approaches to analyze in detail both the structural organization of the speckle compartment and nuclear distribution of splicing factors, as well as studying direct interactions between splicing factors and their association with chromatin in vivo. The results support a model where perturbation of normal chromatin structure decreases the recruitment efficiency of splicing factors to nascent RNAs, thus causing their accumulation in speckles, which buffer the amount of free molecules in the nucleoplasm. To test this, we analyzed the recruitment of the general splicing factor U2AF65 to nascent RNAs by iCLIP technique, as a way to monitor early spliceosome assembly. We demonstrate that indeed histone hyper-acetylation decreases recruitment of U2AF65 to bulk 3′ splice sites, coincident with the change in its localization. In addition, prior to the maximum accumulation in speckles, ∼20% of genes already show a tendency to decreased binding, while U2AF65 seems to increase its binding to the speckle-located ncRNA MALAT1. All together, the combined imaging and biochemical approaches support a model where chromatin structure is essential for efficient co-transcriptional recruitment of general and regulatory splicing factors to pre-mRNA. Public Library of Science 2012-11-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3495951/ /pubmed/23152763 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048084 Text en © 2012 Schor 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
Schor, Ignacio E.
Llères, David
Risso, Guillermo J.
Pawellek, Andrea
Ule, Jernej
Lamond, Angus I.
Kornblihtt, Alberto R.
Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors
title Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors
title_full Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors
title_fullStr Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors
title_full_unstemmed Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors
title_short Perturbation of Chromatin Structure Globally Affects Localization and Recruitment of Splicing Factors
title_sort perturbation of chromatin structure globally affects localization and recruitment of splicing factors
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3495951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23152763
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048084
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