Tissue-specific regulation of gene expression via unproductive splicing

Author:

Mironov Alexei1,Petrova Marina1,Margasyuk Sergey1,Vlasenok Maria1,Mironov Andrey A2,Skvortsov Dmitry3,Pervouchine Dmitri D1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Center of Molecular and Cellular Biology , Bolshoy blv. 30, Moscow 121205, Russia

2. Moscow State University, Faculty of Bioengineering and Bioinformatics , ul. Kolmogorova 1, Moscow 119991, Russia

3. Moscow State University, Faculty of Chemistry , ul. Kolmogorova 1, Moscow 119991, Russia

Abstract

Abstract Eukaryotic gene expression is regulated post-transcriptionally by a mechanism called unproductive splicing, in which mRNA is triggered to degrade by the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) pathway as a result of regulated alternative splicing (AS). Only a few dozen unproductive splicing events (USEs) are currently documented, and many more remain to be identified. Here, we analyzed RNA-seq experiments from the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) Consortium to identify USEs, in which an increase in the NMD isoform splicing rate is accompanied by tissue-specific down-regulation of the host gene. To characterize RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) that regulate USEs, we superimposed these results with RBP footprinting data and experiments on the response of the transcriptome to the perturbation of expression of a large panel of RBPs. Concordant tissue-specific changes between the expression of RBP and USE splicing rate revealed a high-confidence regulatory network including 27 tissue-specific USEs with strong evidence of RBP binding. Among them, we found previously unknown PTBP1-controlled events in the DCLK2 and IQGAP1 genes, for which we confirmed the regulatory effect using small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown experiments in the A549 cell line. In sum, we present a transcriptomic pipeline that allows the identification of tissue-specific USEs, potentially many more than were reported here using stringent filters.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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