Prevalence and Significance of Nonsense Mediated MRNA Decay Coupled with Alternative Splicing in Diverse Eukaryotic Organisms


Book Description

Alternative splicing plays a crucial role in increasing the amount of protein diversity and in regulating gene expression at the post-transcriptional level. In humans, almost all genes produce more than one mRNA isoform and, while the fraction varies, many other species also have a substantial number of alternatively spliced genes. Alternative splicing is regulated by splicing factors, often in a developmental time- or tissue-specific manner. Mis-regulation of alternative splicing, via mutations in splice sites, splicing regulatory elements, or splicing factors, can lead to disease states, including cancers. Thus, characterizing how alternative splicing shapes the transcriptome will lead to greater insights into the regulation of numerous cellular pathways and many aspects of human health. A critical tool for investigating alternative splicing is high-throughput mRNA sequencing (RNA-seq). This technology produces hundreds of millions of short (~100bp) sequencing reads from mRNA molecules and can be used to both discover novel transcripts and to quantify the expression of transcripts. While short read length is a limitation of the technology in its current form, RNA-seq has resulted in the discovery of hundreds of thousands of new transcripts and revealed an increased complexity of the transcriptome via alternative splicing, particularly in human. Here, I used RNA-seq analysis to investigate the global effect of post-transcriptional regulation via alternative splicing coupled to nonsense-mediated mRNA decay and to examine natural human variation in alternative splicing, particularly in genes associated with differential therapeutic drug response. The nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway (NMD), which degrades transcripts containing a premature termination codon, plays an important role in post-transcriptional gene regulation when coupled to alternative splicing. If a gene produces an alternative isoform that is targeted by NMD, the mRNA abundance of the protein-producing transcripts can be post-transcriptionally regulated at the alternative splicing level. This has been shown to be important in the regulation of a number of genes, including many of the splicing factors themselves. I have used RNA-seq analysis on cells where NMD has been inhibited to discover alternative isoforms that are NMD targets on a genome-wide scale in human and a number of diverse other eukaryotic species. I found that around 20% of expressed human genes are potentially regulated by alternative splicing coupled to NMD and that they fall into many different functional categories. I also found that hundreds to thousands of genes produce NMD-targeted alternative isoforms in each of frog, zebrafish, fly, fission yeast, and plant, highlighting the prevalence of this relatively under-studied method of gene regulation across the three major branches of eukaryotic organisms. I also gained insight into the features that define NMD targets, which are thought to vary between species although the field is still unclear. I find that an exon-exon junction downstream of the termination codon is a much stronger predictor of NMD than 3’ UTR length in every species except yeast. I also used RNA-seq to investigate alternative splicing in genes of pharmacologic importance. Natural human variation in the expression level and activity of genes involved in drug disposition and action (“pharmacogenes”) can affect drug response and toxicity. Previous studies have relied primarily on microarrays to understand gene expression differences, or have focused on a single tissue or small number of samples. Here, we used RNA-seq to determine the expression levels and alternative splicing of 389 selected pharmacogenes across four pharmacologically relevant tissues (liver, kidney, heart and adipose) and lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs), which are used widely in pharmacogenomics studies. Analysis of data from 18 different individuals for each of the 5 tissues (90 samples in total) revealed substantial variation in both expression levels and splicing across samples and tissue types. Comparison with an independent RNA-seq dataset yielded a consistent picture. This in-depth exploration also revealed 183 splicing events in pharmacogenes that were previously not annotated. Overall, this study serves as a rich resource for the research community to inform biomarker and drug discovery and use. In conclusion, the roles of alternative splicing and NMD in the regulation of cellular processes and in human health are wide-open but critical fields of study. Advancements in sequencing technologies have had and will continue to have a huge impact on the studies of these mechanisms. New long-read technologies will likely soon be readily available and promise to greatly increase our ability to accurately interpret RNA-seq results. As the cost of sequencing continues to decrease, more and more data will be generated, allowing for a better view of how the transcriptome varies between individuals and shapes differential disease risks and drug responses.







Nonsense-Mediated mRNA Decay


Book Description

Nonsense-Mediated mRNA Decay is the first book devoted to nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). The rationale for such a book is the enormous information that studies of NMD have provided on the intricacies of post-transcriptional gene expression. The first five sections of the book are divided according to organism and begin with chapters on S. cere




Alternative Splicing in the Postgenomic Era


Book Description

Yet again Springer has reached the market before everyone. This is the first book that is solely dedicated to the topic of alternative splicing. The book contains chapters by experts in the field that cover nearly all aspects of this hugely important subject. The purpose of the text is to provide a single, authoritative source of information on alternative splicing that is accessible to researchers in diverse fields. It is suitable for beginners and experts alike.







Regulation of Core Splicing Factors by Alternative Splicing and Nonsense-mediated MRNA Decay


Book Description

The majority of human genes are transcribed into a precursor messenger RNA (pre-mRNA) that is processed to produce multiple mRNA variants through alternative splicing. Although alternative splicing is known for its role in generating proteomic diversity, it can also regulate gene expression by introducing premature termination codons that target the spliced transcript for nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (AS-NMD). In order to understand the impact of AS-NMD on gene expression, I performed quantitative AS microarray profiling of NMD-inhibited human cells. Using this system, I address the prevalence, trans-acting factor requirements and the range of cellular functions regulated by AS-NMD. While this pathway had been implicated in homeostatic feedback regulation of genes encoding splicing-regulatory proteins, my results revealed highly conserved alternative exons regulated by AS-NMD in genes encoding basal or 'core' splicing factors. I further characterized one of these exons in the gene encoding SmB/B', and demonstrated that SmB/B' autoregulates its expression through AS-NMD. Furthermore, AS profiling revealed that knockdown of this core splicing factor affects the inclusion levels of additional alternative exons enriched in genes with functions in RNA processing and RNA binding. In summary, my results reveal a role for AS-NMD in regulating the expression of core splicing factors, as well as a role for the core spliceosomal machinery in coordinating a network of alternative exons in RNA processing factor genes.




Nuclear pre-mRNA Processing in Plants


Book Description

During the last few years, tremendous progress has been made in understanding various aspects of pre-mRNA processing. This book, with contributions from leading scientists in this area, summarizes recent advances in nuclear pre-mRNA processing in plants. It provides researchers in the field, as well as those in related areas, with an up-to-date and comprehensive, yet concise, overview of the current status and future potential of this research in understanding plant biology.




RNA Turnover in Eukaryotes: Analysis of Specialized and Quality Control RNA Decay Pathways


Book Description

Specific complexes of protein and RNA carry out many essential biological functions, including RNA processing, RNA turnover, and RNA folding, as well as the translation of genetic information from mRNA into protein sequences. Messenger RNA (mRNA) decay is now emerging as an important control point and a major contributor to gene expression. Continuing identification of the protein factors and cofactors and mRNA instability elements responsible for mRNA decay allow researchers to build a comprehensive picture of the highly orchestrated processes involved in mRNA decay and its regulation. * Covers the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) or mRNA surveillance pathway * Expert researchers introduce the most advanced technologies and techniques * Offers step-by-step lab instructions, including necessary equipment and reagents




Alternative Splicing and Disease


Book Description

Alternative splicing (AS) is a fundamental mechanism of gene expression regulation that extremely expands the coding potential of genomes and the cellular transcriptomic and proteomic diversity. This dynamic and finely-tuned machinery is particularly widespread in the nervous system and is critical for both neuronal development and functions. Alternative splicing defects, therefore, frequently underlie neurological disorders. In the first chapter of this book, the authors focus on Parkinson's disease (PD), the second most common neurodegenerative disorder worldwide. They provide a current overview on the impact of alternative splicing in PD by representing the multiple splicing transcripts produced from the major PD-linked genes and their regulation in PD states; review the studies describing global splicing expression changes revealed by whole-genome transcriptomic approaches; and summarise the current knowledge about the alternative splicing modulation in PD through non-coding RNAs (miRNA and lcnRNA) molecules. The following chapter reviews tau alternative splicing in Alzheimer's disease. Chapter three examines the role of splicing factors in cancer prognosis and treatment. The last chapter studies nonsense-mediated decay and human disease.