4.8 Article

Arginine/serine repeats are sufficient to constitute a splicing activation domain

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 31, Issue 22, Pages 6502-6508

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkg845

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM062516, R01 GM062516-02, R01 GM062516] Funding Source: Medline

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SR proteins are essential pre-mRNA splicing factors that have been shown to bind a number of exonic splicing enhancers where they function to stimulate the splicing of adjacent introns. Members of the SR protein family contain one or two N-terminal RNA binding domains, as well as a C-terminal arginine-serine (RS) rich domain. The RS domains mediate protein-protein interactions with other RS domain containing proteins and are essential for many, but not all, SR protein functions. Hybrid proteins containing an RS domain fused to the bacteriophage MS2 coat protein are sufficient to activate enhancer-dependent splicing in HeLa cell nuclear extract when bound to the pre-mRNA. Here we report progress towards determining the protein sequence requirements for RS domain function. We show that the RS domains from non-SR proteins can also function as splicing activation domains when tethered to the pre-mRNA. Truncation experiments with the RS domain of the human SR protein 9G8 identified a 29 amino acid segment, containing 26 arginine or serine residues, that is sufficient to activate splicing when fused to MS2. We also show that synthetic domains composed solely of RS dipeptides are capable of activating splicing, although their potency is proportional to their size.

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