Publication | Open Access
The STAR/GSG Family Protein rSLM-2 Regulates the Selection of Alternative Splice Sites
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Citations
67
References
2001
Year
Alternative Splice SitesCd44 MinigeneMolecular RegulationGeneticsRna SplicingAdapter ProteinMolecular BiologyGenomic MechanismMolecular GeneticsSplicing VariantTranscriptional RegulationProtein ExpressionProteomicsRna ProcessingGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsCell BiologySignal TransductionNatural SciencesGene RegulationSystems BiologyMedicine
We identified the rat Sam68-like mammalian protein (rSLM-2), a member of the STAR (signal transduction and activation of RNA) protein family as a novel splicing regulatory protein. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, coimmunoprecipitations, and pull-down assays, we demonstrate that rSLM-2 interacts with various proteins involved in the regulation of alternative splicing, among them the serine/arginine-rich protein SRp30c, the splicing-associated factor YT521-B and the scaffold attachment factor B. rSLM-2 can influence the splicing pattern of the CD44v5, human transformer-2beta and tau minigenes in cotransfection experiments. This effect can be reversed by rSLM-2-interacting proteins. Employing rSLM-2 deletion variants, gel mobility shift assays, and linker scan mutations of the CD44 minigene, we show that the rSLM-2-dependent inclusion of exon v5 of the CD44 pre-mRNA is dependent on a short purine-rich sequence. Because the related protein of rSLM-2, Sam68, is believed to play a role as an adapter protein during signal transduction, we postulate that rSLM-2 is a link between signal transduction pathways and pre-mRNA processing.
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