Publication | Closed Access
Colocalization of muscleblind with RNA foci is separable from mis-regulation of alternative splicing in myotonic dystrophy
181
Citations
36
References
2005
Year
Transcriptional RegulationDevelopmental BiologyFunctional GenomicsMyotonic Dystrophy TypeSkeletal MuscleMutant DmpkGeneticsMedicineRna BiologyGene RegulationAlternative SplicingMbnl ProteinsGene ExpressionMyotonic DystrophyCell BiologySplicing VariantRna ProcessingRna Foci
Myotonic dystrophy type I (DM1), which is caused by a non-coding CTG-repeat expansion in the dystrophia myotonica-protein kinase (DMPK) gene, is an RNA-mediated disease. Expanded CUG repeats in transcripts of mutant DMPK form nuclear foci that recruit muscleblind-like (MBNL) proteins, a family of alternative splicing factors. Although transcripts of mutant DMPK and MBNL proteins accumulate in nuclear RNA foci, it is not clear whether foci formation is required for splicing mis-regulation. Here, we use a co-transfection strategy to show that both CUG and CAG repeats form RNA foci that colocalize with green fluorescent protein (GFP)-MBNL1 and endogenous MBNL1. However, only CUG repeats alter splicing of the two tested pre-mRNAs, cardiac troponin T (cTNT) and insulin receptor (IR). Using FRAP, we demonstrate that GFP-MBNL1 in CUG and CAG foci have similar half-times of recovery and fractions of immobile molecules, suggesting that GFP-MBNL1 is bound by both CUG and CAG repeats. We also find an immobile fraction of GFP-MBNL1 in DM1 fibroblasts and a similar rapid exchange in endogenous CUG RNA foci. Therefore, formation of RNA foci and disruption of MBNL1-regulated splicing are separable events.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1