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Predominance of spliceosomal complex formation over polyadenylation site selection in TDP-43 autoregulation
Author(s) -
Sara Bembich,
Jeremias S. Herzog,
Laura De Conti,
Cristiana Stuani,
S. Eréndira AvendañoVázquez,
Emanuele Buratti,
Marco Baralle,
Francisco E. Baralle
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkt1343
Subject(s) - biology , polyadenylation , intron , rna splicing , spliceosome , rna , microbiology and biotechnology , messenger rna , rna binding protein , precursor mrna , minigene , autoregulation , genetics , gene , blood pressure , endocrinology
TDP-43 is a nuclear protein involved in many aspects of RNA metabolism. To ensure cellular viability, its expression levels within cells must be tightly regulated. We have previously demonstrated that TDP-43 autoregulation occurs through the activation of a normally silent intron in its 3'-UTR sequence that results in the use of alternative polyadenylation sites. In this work, we analyse which is the dominant event in autoregulation: the recognition of the splice sites of 3'-UTR intron 7 or the intrinsic quality of the alternative polyadenylation sites. A panel of minigene constructs was tested for autoregulation functionality, protein production and subcellular messenger RNA localization. Our data clearly indicate that constitutive spliceosome complex formation across intron 7 does not lead to high protein production but, on the contrary, to lower TDP-43 messenger RNA and protein levels. This is due to altered nucleocytoplasmic distribution of the RNA that is mostly retained in the nucleus and degraded. This study provides a novel in-depth characterization of how RNA binding proteins can autoregulate their own levels within cells, an essential regulatory process in maintaining cellular viability.

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