
An Apparent Pseudo-Exon Acts both as an Alternative Exon That Leads to Nonsense-Mediated Decay and as a Zero-Length Exon
Author(s) -
SushmaNagaraja Grellscheid,
Christopher W. Smith
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.26.6.2237-2246.2006
Subject(s) - exon , exon shuffling , tandem exon duplication , exon trapping , splice site mutation , biology , rna splicing , genetics , alternative splicing , minigene , spliceosome , exonic splicing enhancer , exon skipping , nonsense mutation , mutation , gene , rna , missense mutation
Pseudo-exons are intronic sequences that are flanked by apparent consensus splice sites but that are not observed in spliced mRNAs. Pseudo-exons are often difficult to activate by mutation and have typically been viewed as a conceptual challenge to our understanding of how the spliceosome discriminates between authentic and cryptic splice sites. We have analyzed an apparent pseudo-exon located downstream of mutually exclusive exons 2 and 3 of the rat α-tropomyosin (TM) gene. The TM pseudo-exon is conserved among mammals and has a conserved profile of predicted splicing enhancers and silencers that is more typical of a genuine exon than a pseudo-exon. Splicing of the pseudo-exon is fully activated for splicing to exon 3 by a number of simple mutations. Splicing of the pseudo-exon to exon 3 is predicted to lead to nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). In contrast, when “prespliced” to exon 2 it follows a “zero length exon” splicing pathway in which a newly generated 5′ splice site at the junction with exon 2 is spliced to exon 4. We propose that a subset of apparent pseudo-exons, as exemplified here, are actually authentic alternative exons whose inclusion leads to NMD.