Exonic splicing code and coordination of divalent metals in proteins

Author:

Bakhtiar Dara1,Vondraskova Katarina2,Pengelly Reuben J1ORCID,Chivers Martin1,Kralovicova Jana12ORCID,Vorechovsky Igor1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Southampton, Faculty of Medicine , Southampton  SO16 6YD , UK

2. Slovak Academy of Sciences, Centre of Biosciences , 840 05  Bratislava , Slovak Republic

Abstract

Abstract Exonic sequences contain both protein-coding and RNA splicing information but the interplay of the protein and splicing code is complex and poorly understood. Here, we have studied traditional and auxiliary splicing codes of human exons that encode residues coordinating two essential divalent metals at the opposite ends of the Irving–Williams series, a universal order of relative stabilities of metal–organic complexes. We show that exons encoding Zn2+-coordinating amino acids are supported much less by the auxiliary splicing motifs than exons coordinating Ca2+. The handicap of the former is compensated by stronger splice sites and uridine-richer polypyrimidine tracts, except for position –3 relative to 3′ splice junctions. However, both Ca2+ and Zn2+ exons exhibit close-to-constitutive splicing in multiple tissues, consistent with their critical importance for metalloprotein function and a relatively small fraction of expendable, alternatively spliced exons. These results indicate that constraints imposed by metal coordination spheres on RNA splicing have been efficiently overcome by the plasticity of exon–intron architecture to ensure adequate metalloprotein expression.

Funder

University of Southampton

VEGA

Slovak Research and Development Agency

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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