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Efficient system for upstream mRNA trans-splicing to generate covalent, head-to-tail, protein multimers
Author(s) -
Hiroaki Mitsuhashi,
Shunsaku Homma,
Mary Lou Beermann,
Satoshi Ishimaru,
Hayato Takeda,
Bryant Yu,
Kevin Liu,
Swetha Duraiswamy,
Frederick M. Boyce,
Jeffrey B. Miller
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/s41598-018-36684-7
Subject(s) - rna splicing , plasmid , trans splicing , alternative splicing , complementary dna , biology , gene , coding region , messenger rna , fusion protein , microbiology and biotechnology , rna , genetics , recombinant dna
We present a plasmid-based system in which upstream trans-splicing efficiently generates mRNAs that encode head-to-tail protein multimers. In this system, trans-splicing occurs between one of two downstream splice donors in the sequence encoding a C-terminal V5 epitope tag and an upstream splice acceptor in the 5′ region of the pCS2(+) host plasmid. Using deletion and fusion constructs of the DUX4 protein as an example, we found that this system produced trans-spliced mRNAs in which coding regions from independent transcripts were fused in phase such that covalent head-to-tail protein multimers were translated. For a cDNA of ~450 bp, about half of the expressed proteins were multimeric, with the efficiency of trans-splicing and extent of multimer expression decreasing as cDNA length increased. This system generated covalent heterodimeric proteins upon co-transfections of plasmids encoding separate proteins and did not require a long complementary binding domain to position mRNAs for trans-splicing. This plasmid-based trans-splicing system is adaptable to multiple gene delivery systems, and it presents new opportunities for investigating molecular mechanisms of trans-splicing, generating covalent protein multimers with novel functions within cells, and producing mRNAs encoding large proteins from split precursors.

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