A Novel Bipartite Intronic Splicing Enhancer Promotes the Inclusion of a Mini-exon in the AMP Deaminase 1 Gene

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Abstract

Alternative splicing of the 12-base exon 2 of the adenosine monophosphate deaminase (AMPD) gene is subject to regulation by both cis- and trans-regulatory signals. The extent of exon 2 inclusion is stage- and cell type-specific and is subject to the physiological state of the cell. In adult skeletal muscle, a cell type that regulates the activity of this allosteric enzyme at several levels, the exon 2-plus form of AMPD, predominates. We have performed a systematic analysis of the cis-acting regulatory sequences that reside in the intron immediately downstream of this mini-exon. A complex element comprising sequences that enhance exon 2 inclusion and sequences that counteract this effect resides in the middle of this intron. We demonstrate that the enhancing component is bipartite, with more than a kilobase of sequence separating the two functional sites. The presence of even minimal levels the mini-exon in the fully processed AMPD mRNA requires both of these sites, neither of which appears in any other published splicing enhancer. An RNA binding activity derived from a muscle cell line requires both of the enhancing sites. Mutations in either of the sites that eliminate exon 2 inclusion abrogate this binding activity.

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Genetta, T., Morisaki, H., Morisaki, T., & Holmes, E. W. (2001). A Novel Bipartite Intronic Splicing Enhancer Promotes the Inclusion of a Mini-exon in the AMP Deaminase 1 Gene. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(27), 25589–25597. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M011637200

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