On the Function of Trans-Splicing: No Evidence for Widespread Proteome Diversification in Trypanosomes

Author:

Soulette Cameron M12,Oliverio Oliver1,Roy Scott W13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, San Francisco State University

2. Molecular, Cellular & Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA

3. Quantitative Systems Biology, University of California, Merced

Abstract

Abstract A long-standing mystery of genomic/transcriptomic structure involves spliced leader trans-splicing (SLTS), in which short RNA “tags” transcribed from a distinct genomic locus is added near the 5′ end of RNA transcripts by the spliceosome. SLTS has been observed in diverse eukaryotes in a phylogenetic pattern implying recurrent independent evolution. This striking convergence suggests important functions for SLTS, however no general novel function is known. Recent findings of frequent alternative SLTS (ALT-TS) suggest that ALT-TS could impart widespread functionality. Here, we tested the hypothesis that ALT-TS diversifies proteomes by comparing splicing patterns in orthologous genes between two deeply diverged trypanosome parasites. We also tested proteome diversification functions of ALT-TS by utilizing ribosome profiling sequence data. Finally, we investigated ALT-TS as a mechanism to regulate the expression of unproductive transcripts. Although our results indicate the functional importance of some cases of trans-splicing, we find no evidence for the hypothesis that proteome diversification is a general function of trans-splicing.

Funder

National Institute of Health Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement

UC Santa Cruz Initiative for Maximizing Student Development program

FORD Foundation Fellowship

Center for Computing in the Life Sciences at San Francisco State University

NSF-MCB

New Investigator Grant from the California State University Program for Education and Research in Biotechnology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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