MEN1 is a regulator of alternative splicing and prevents R-loop-induced genome instability through suppression of RNA polymerase II elongation

Author:

Jin Bangming1234ORCID,Zhu Jiamei134,Pan Ting134,Yang Yunqiao1234,Liang Li134,Zhou Yuxia134,Zhang Tuo134,Teng Yin25,Wang Ziming134,Wang Xuyan134,Tian Qianting35,Guo Bing134,Li Haiyang25,Chen Tengxiang1234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Guizhou Medical University , 550025  Guiyang , China

2. Department of Surgery, Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou Medical University , 550025  Guiyang , China

3. Transformation Engineering Research Center of Chronic Disease Diagnosis and Treatment, Guizhou Medical University , Guiyang , China

4. Guizhou Provincial Key Laboratory of Pathogenesis and Drug Research on Common Chronic Diseases, Guizhou Medical University , 550025  Guiyang , China

5. Guizhou Institute of Precision Medicine, Affiliated Hospital of Guizhou Medical University , 550025  Guiyang , China

Abstract

Abstract The fidelity of alternative splicing (AS) patterns is essential for growth development and cell fate determination. However, the scope of the molecular switches that regulate AS remains largely unexplored. Here we show that MEN1 is a previously unknown splicing regulatory factor. MEN1 deletion resulted in reprogramming of AS patterns in mouse lung tissue and human lung cancer cells, suggesting that MEN1 has a general function in regulating alternative precursor mRNA splicing. MEN1 altered exon skipping and the abundance of mRNA splicing isoforms of certain genes with suboptimal splice sites. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and chromosome walking assays revealed that MEN1 favored the accumulation of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) in regions encoding variant exons. Our data suggest that MEN1 regulates AS by slowing the Pol II elongation rate and that defects in these processes trigger R-loop formation, DNA damage accumulation and genome instability. Furthermore, we identified 28 MEN1-regulated exon-skipping events in lung cancer cells that were closely correlated with survival in patients with lung adenocarcinoma, and MEN1 deficiency sensitized lung cancer cells to splicing inhibitors. Collectively, these findings led to the identification of a novel biological role for menin in maintaining AS homeostasis and link this role to the regulation of cancer cell behavior.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Guizhou Provincial Science and Technology Projects

Universities Young Science and Technology Talent Growth Project in Guizhou Province

Guizhou Provincial Natural Science Foundation

Guizhou Medical University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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