Publication | Open Access
Combinatorial Control of Signal-Induced Exon Repression by hnRNP L and PSF
75
Citations
27
References
2007
Year
Cd45 Gene UndergoesMolecular RegulationGeneticsRna SplicingSignal RecognitionMolecular BiologySignal-induced Exon RepressionGene Regulatory NetworkSplicing VariantCombinatorial ControlTranscriptional RegulationCell RegulationExon SkippingFactor PsfGene ExpressionCell BiologyHnrnp LTranscription RegulationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesGene RegulationSystems BiologyMedicine
Cells can regulate their protein repertoire in response to extracellular stimuli via alternative splicing; however, the mechanisms controlling this process are poorly understood. The CD45 gene undergoes alternative splicing in response to T-cell activation to regulate T-cell function. The ESS1 splicing silencer in CD45 exon 4 confers basal exon skipping in resting T cells through the activity of hnRNP L and confers activation-induced exon skipping in T cells via previously unknown mechanisms. Here we have developed an in vitro splicing assay that recapitulates the signal-induced alternative splicing of CD45 and demonstrate that cellular stimulation leads to two changes to the ESS1-bound splicing regulatory complex. Activation-induced posttranslational modification of hnRNP L correlates with a modest increase in the protein's repressive activity. More importantly, the splicing factor PSF is recruited to the ESS1 complex in an activation-dependent manner and accounts for the majority of the signal-regulated ESS1 activity. The associations of hnRNP L and PSF with the ESS1 complex are largely independent of each other, but together these proteins account for the total signal-regulated change in CD45 splicing observed in vitro and in vivo. Such a combinatorial effect on splicing allows for precise regulation of signal-induced alternative splicing.
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