Activation-Dependent TRAF3 Exon 8 Alternative Splicing Is Controlled by CELF2 and hnRNP C Binding to an Upstream Intronic Element

Author:

Schultz Astrid-Solveig1,Preussner Marco1,Bunse Mario2,Karni Rotem3,Heyd Florian1

Affiliation:

1. Freie Universität Berlin, Institute of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Berlin, Germany

2. Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany

3. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Institute for Medical Research Israel-Canada, Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Ein Karem, Jerusalem, Israel

Abstract

ABSTRACT Cell-type-specific and inducible alternative splicing has a fundamental impact on regulating gene expression and cellular function in a variety of settings, including activation and differentiation. We have recently shown that activation-induced skipping of TRAF3 exon 8 activates noncanonical NF-κB signaling upon T cell stimulation, but the regulatory basis for this splicing event remains unknown. Here we identify cis - and trans -regulatory elements rendering this splicing switch activation dependent and cell type specific. The cis -acting element is located 340 to 440 nucleotides upstream of the regulated exon and acts in a distance-dependent manner, since altering the location reduces its activity. A small interfering RNA screen, followed by cross-link immunoprecipitation and mutational analyses, identified CELF2 and hnRNP C as trans -acting factors that directly bind the regulatory sequence and together mediate increased exon skipping in activated T cells. CELF2 expression levels correlate with TRAF3 exon skipping in several model systems, suggesting that CELF2 is the decisive factor, with hnRNP C being necessary but not sufficient. These data suggest an interplay between CELF2 and hnRNP C as the mechanistic basis for activation-dependent alternative splicing of TRAF3 exon 8 and additional exons and uncover an intronic splicing silencer whose full activity depends on the precise location more than 300 nucleotides upstream of the regulated exon.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Fritz Thyssen Stiftung

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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