Abstract
Comparison of the sequences of mouse and human genomes revealed a
surprising number of nonexonic, nonexpressed conserved sequences, for which no
function could be assigned. To study the possible correlation between these
conserved intronic sequences and alternative splicing regulation, we developed
a method to identify exons that are alternatively spliced in both human and
mouse. We compiled two exon sets: one of alternatively spliced conserved exons
and another of constitutively spliced conserved exons. We found that 77% of
the conserved alternatively spliced exons were flanked on both sides by long
conserved intronic sequences. In comparison, only 17% of the conserved
constitutively spliced exons were flanked by suchconserved intronic sequences.
The average length of the conserved intronic sequences was 103 bases in the
upstream intron and 94 bases in the downstream intron. The average identity
levels in the immediately flanking intronic sequences were 88% and 80% for the
upstream and downstream introns, respectively, higher than the conservation
levels of 77% that were measured in promoter regions. Our results suggest that
the function of many of the intronic sequence blocks that are conserved
between human and mouse is the regulation of alternative splicing.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
208 articles.
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