The Silent Sway of Splicing by Synonymous Substitutions
Alternative splicing diversifies mRNA transcripts in human cells. This sequence-driven process can be influenced greatly by mutations, even those that do not change the protein coding potential of the transcript. Synonymous mutations have been shown to alter gene expression through modulation of spl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2015-11, Vol.290 (46), p.27700-27711 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Alternative splicing diversifies mRNA transcripts in human cells. This sequence-driven process can be influenced greatly by mutations, even those that do not change the protein coding potential of the transcript. Synonymous mutations have been shown to alter gene expression through modulation of splicing, mRNA stability, and translation. Using a synonymous position mutation library in SMN1 exon 7, we show that 23% of synonymous mutations across the exon decrease exon inclusion, suggesting that nucleotide identity across the entire exon has been evolutionarily optimized to support a particular exon inclusion level. Although phylogenetic conservation scores are insufficient to identify synonymous positions important for exon inclusion, an alignment of organisms filtered based on similar exon/intron architecture is highly successful. Although many of the splicing neutral mutations are observed to occur, none of the exon inclusion reducing mutants was found in the filtered alignment. Using the modified phylogenetic comparison as an approach to evaluate the impact on pre-mRNA splicing suggests that up to 45% of synonymous SNPs are likely to alter pre-mRNA splicing. These results demonstrate that coding and pre-mRNA splicing pressures co-evolve and that a modified phylogenetic comparison based on the exon/intron architecture is a useful tool in identifying splice altering SNPs.
The effects of silent mutations on pre-mRNA splicing are poorly understood.
Silent mutations can significantly influence exon inclusion and are under purifying selection.
Splicing and coding pressures have co-evolved to maintain sufficient exon inclusion levels.
Modified species alignment approaches can be used to identify silent mutations that may alter exon inclusion. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M115.684035 |