Alternative splicing of mRNA precursors allows the synthesis of multiple mRNAs from a single primary transcript, significantly expanding the information content and regulatory possibilities of higher eukaryotic genomes. High-throughput enabling technologies, particularly large-scale sequencing and splicing-sensitive microarrays, are providing unprecedented opportunities to address key questions in this field. The picture emerging from these pioneering studies is that alternative splicing affects most human genes and a significant fraction of the genes in other multicellular organisms, with the potential to greatly influence the evolution of complex genomes. A combinatorial code of regulatory signals and factors can deploy physiologically coherent programs of alternative splicing that are distinct from those regulated at other steps of gene expression. Pre-mRNA splicing and its regulation play important roles in human pathologies, and genome-wide analyses in this area are paving the way for improved diagnostic tools and for the identification of novel and more specific pharmaceutical targets. © 2008 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Ben-Dov, C., Hartmann, B., Lundgren, J., & Valcárcel, J. (2008, January 18). Genome-wide analysis of alternative pre-mRNA splicing. Journal of Biological Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.R700033200
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