4.5 Article

Transcriptomic and genomic identification of spliceosomal genes from Euglena gracilis

Journal

ACTA BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA SINICA
Volume 55, Issue 11, Pages 1740-1748

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.3724/abbs.2023143

Keywords

txcavata; spliceosome; intron; transcriptome; trans-splicing; SF3B

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This study identifies spliceosomal components in the protist Euglena gracilis and reveals the sequence-level sensitivity to splicing modulators. The prevalence of SL RNA-mediated trans-splicing is estimated to be high in this species. Furthermore, a comparison of splicing proteomes between E. gracilis and its evolutionary cousins provides insights for further exploration of splicing mechanisms.
Diverse splicing types in nuclear and chloroplast genes of protist Euglena gracilis have been recognized for decades. However, the splicing machinery responsible for processing nuclear precursor messenger RNA introns, including trans- splicing of the 5' terminal outron and spliced leader (SL) RNA, remains elusive. Here, we identify 166 spliceosomal protein genes and two snRNA genes from E. gracilis by performing bioinformatics analysis from a combination of next-generation and full-length transcriptomic RNA sequencing (RNAseq) data as well as draft genomic data. With the spliceosomal proteins we identified in hand, the insensitivity of E. gracilis to some splicing modulators is revealed at the sequence level. The prevalence of SL RNA-mediated trans- splicing is estimated to be more than 70% from our full-length RNAseq data. Finally, the splicing proteomes between E. gracilis and its three evolutionary cousins within the same Excavata group are compared. In conclusion, our study characterizes the spliceosomal components in E. gracilis and provides the molecular basis for further exploration of underlying splicing mechanisms.

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