Affiliation:
1. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Génétique et Développement, UMR 6290, Rennes, France
2. Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The output of alternative splicing depends on the cooperative or antagonistic activities of several RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), like Ptbp1 and Esrp1 in
Xenopus
. Fine-tuning of the RBP abundance is therefore of prime importance to achieve tissue- or cell-specific splicing patterns. Here, we addressed the mechanisms leading to the high expression of the
ptbp1
gene, which encodes Ptbp1, in
Xenopus
epidermis. Two splice isoforms of
ptbp1
mRNA differ by the presence of an alternative exon 11, and only the isoform including exon 11 can be translated to a full-length protein.
In vivo
minigene assays revealed that the nonproductive isoform was predominantly produced. Knockdown experiments demonstrated that Esrp1, which is specific to the epidermis, strongly stimulated the expression of
ptbp1
by favoring the productive isoform. Consequently, knocking down
esrp1
phenocopied
ptbp1
inactivation. Conversely, Ptbp1 repressed the expression of its own gene by favoring the nonproductive isoform. Hence, a complex posttranscriptional mechanism controls Ptbp1 abundance in
Xenopus
epidermis: skipping of exon 11 is the default splicing pattern, but Esrp1 stimulates
ptbp1
expression by favoring the inclusion of exon 11 up to a level that is limited by Ptbp1 itself. These results decipher a posttranscriptional mechanism that achieves various abundances of the ubiquitous RBP Ptbp1 in different tissues.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
8 articles.
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