Publication | Open Access
"Silent" nucleotide substitution in a beta+-thalassemia globin gene activates splice site in coding sequence RNA.
89
Citations
45
References
1983
Year
GeneticsRna SplicingMolecular BiologyGene CharacterizationMolecular GeneticsSplicing VariantTranscriptional RegulationProtein ExpressionHematologyGene StructureSplice SiteRna ProcessingNormal GeneGene ExpressionGene FunctionSequence RnaBeta+-thalassemia Globin GeneDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesGene RegulationMedicine
A beta+-thalassemia globin gene was isolated from the genome of a Black individual by molecular cloning. DNA sequence analysis revealed only a single difference between this gene and the normal human beta-globin gene--adenine is substituted for thymine in the third position of codon 24. Codon 24 in both the normal gene (GGT) and the beta+-thalassemia gene (GGA) encodes glycine. The function of this beta+-thalassemia gene was compared to the function of the normal human beta-globin gene in monkey kidney cells by using plasmid expression vectors. The codon 24 substitution activates a 5' splice site that involves the guanine-thymine dinucleotide present in codon 25, 16 nucleotides upstream from the normal exon 1-intron I boundary. The splice, involving the abnormal 5' site in codon 25, is completed with the normal 3' splice site at the end of intron I. This splicing abnormality leads to a 75% decrease in the accumulation of normally processed beta-globin mRNA, thereby causing the beta+-thalassemia phenotype.
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