A lncRNA regulates alternative splicing via establishment of a splicing-specific chromatin signature

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Abstract

Alternative pre-mRNA splicing is a highly cell type-specific process essential to generating protein diversity. However, the mechanisms responsible for the establishment and maintenance of heritable cell-specific alternative-splicing programs are poorly understood. Recent observations point to a role of histone modifications in the regulation of alternative splicing. Here we report a new mechanism of chromatin-mediated splicing control involving a long noncoding RNA (lncRNA). We have identified an evolutionarily conserved nuclear antisense lncRNA, generated from within the human FGFR2 locus, that promotes epithelial-specific alternative splicing of FGFR2. The lncRNA acts through recruitment of Polycomb-group proteins and the histone demethylase KDM2a to create a chromatin environment that impairs binding of a repressive chromatin-splicing adaptor complex important for mesenchymal-specific splicing. Our results uncover a new function for lncRNAs in the establishment and maintenance of cell-specific alternative splicing via modulation of chromatin signatures.

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Gonzalez, I., Munita, R., Agirre, E., Dittmer, T. A., Gysling, K., Misteli, T., & Luco, R. F. (2015). A lncRNA regulates alternative splicing via establishment of a splicing-specific chromatin signature. Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, 22(5), 370–376. https://doi.org/10.1038/nsmb.3005

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