Boutz Paul L, Stoilov Peter, Li Qin, Lin Chia-Ho, Chawla Geetanjali, Ostrow Kristin, Shiue Lily, Ares Manuel, Black Douglas L
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics, 6-762 MacDonald Research Laboratories, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
Genes Dev. 2007 Jul 1;21(13):1636-52. doi: 10.1101/gad.1558107.
Many metazoan gene transcripts exhibit neuron-specific splicing patterns, but the developmental control of these splicing events is poorly understood. We show that the splicing of a large group of exons is reprogrammed during neuronal development by a switch in expression between two highly similar polypyrimidine tract-binding proteins, PTB and nPTB (neural PTB). PTB is a well-studied regulator of alternative splicing, but nPTB is a closely related paralog whose functional relationship to PTB is unknown. In the brain, nPTB protein is specifically expressed in post-mitotic neurons, whereas PTB is restricted to neuronal precursor cells (NPC), glia, and other nonneuronal cells. Interestingly, nPTB mRNA transcripts are found in NPCs and other nonneuronal cells, but in these cells nPTB protein expression is repressed. This repression is due in part to PTB-induced alternative splicing of nPTB mRNA, leading to nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). However, we find that even properly spliced mRNA fails to express nPTB protein when PTB is present, indicating contributions from additional post-transcriptional mechanisms. The PTB-controlled repression of nPTB results in a mutually exclusive pattern of expression in the brain, where the loss of PTB in maturing neurons allows the synthesis of nPTB in these cells. To examine the consequences of this switch, we used splicing-sensitive microarrays to identify different sets of exons regulated by PTB, nPTB, or both proteins. During neuronal differentiation, the splicing of these exon sets is altered as predicted from the observed changes in PTB and nPTB expression. These data show that the post-transcriptional switch from PTB to nPTB controls a widespread alternative splicing program during neuronal development.
许多后生动物的基因转录本呈现出神经元特异性的剪接模式,但这些剪接事件的发育调控机制却鲜为人知。我们发现,在神经元发育过程中,一大组外显子的剪接通过两种高度相似的聚嘧啶序列结合蛋白PTB和nPTB(神经PTB)之间表达的转换而被重新编程。PTB是一种经过充分研究的可变剪接调节因子,但nPTB是与之密切相关的旁系同源物,其与PTB的功能关系尚不清楚。在大脑中,nPTB蛋白在有丝分裂后的神经元中特异性表达,而PTB则局限于神经元前体细胞(NPC)、神经胶质细胞和其他非神经元细胞。有趣的是,在NPC和其他非神经元细胞中发现了nPTB mRNA转录本,但在这些细胞中nPTB蛋白的表达受到抑制。这种抑制部分归因于PTB诱导的nPTB mRNA可变剪接,导致无义介导的衰变(NMD)。然而,我们发现,即使是正确剪接的mRNA在有PTB存在时也无法表达nPTB蛋白,这表明还存在其他转录后机制的作用。PTB对nPTB的抑制导致大脑中出现相互排斥的表达模式,即成熟神经元中PTB的缺失使得这些细胞能够合成nPTB。为了研究这种转换的后果,我们使用了对剪接敏感的微阵列来鉴定由PTB、nPTB或这两种蛋白共同调控的不同外显子组。在神经元分化过程中,这些外显子组的剪接如根据PTB和nPTB表达的观察变化所预测的那样发生改变。这些数据表明,从PTB到nPTB的转录后转换在神经元发育过程中控制着广泛的可变剪接程序。