4.8 Article

AG-dependent 3′-splice sites are predisposed to aberrant splicing due to a mutation at the first nucleotide of an exon

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 39, Issue 10, Pages 4396-4404

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkr026

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan
  2. Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan
  3. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST)

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In pre-mRNA splicing, a conserved AG/G at the 3'-splice site is recognized by U2AF(35). A disease-causing mutation abrogating the G nucleotide at the first position of an exon (E(+1)) causes exon skipping in GH1, FECH and EYA1, but not in LPL or HEXA. Knockdown of U2AF(35) enhanced exon skipping in GH1 and FECH. RNA-EMSA revealed that wild-type FECH requires U2AF(35) but wild-type LPL does not. A series of artificial mutations in the polypyrimidine tracts of GH1, FECH, EYA1, LPL and HEXA disclosed that a stretch of at least 10-15 pyrimidines is required to ensure normal splicing in the presence of a mutation at E(+1). Analysis of nine other disease-causing mutations at E(+1) detected five splicing mutations. Our studies suggest that a mutation at the AG-dependent 3'-splice site that requires U2AF(35) for spliceosome assembly causes exon skipping, whereas one at the AG-independent 3'-splice site that does not require U2AF(35) gives rise to normal splicing. The AG-dependence of the 3'-splice site that we analyzed in disease-causing mutations at E(+1) potentially helps identify yet unrecognized splicing mutations at E(+1).

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