Cell-type-specific and inducible alternative splicing has a fundamental impact on regulating gene expression and cellular function in a variety of settings, including activation and differentiation. We have recently shown that activation-induced skipping of TRAF3 exon 8 activates noncanonical NF-κB signaling upon T cell stimulation, but the regulatory basis for this splicing event remains unknown. Here we identify cis - and trans -regulatory elements rendering this splicing switch activation dependent and cell type specific. The cis -acting element is located 340 to 440 nucleotides upstream of the regulated exon and acts in a distance-dependent manner, since altering the location reduces its activity. A small interfering RNA screen, followed by cross-link immunoprecipitation and mutational analyses, identified CELF2 and hnRNP C as trans -acting factors that directly bind the regulatory sequence and together mediate increased exon skipping in activated T cells. CELF2 expression levels correlate with TRAF3 exon skipping in several model systems, suggesting that CELF2 is the decisive factor, with hnRNP C being necessary but not sufficient. These data suggest an interplay between CELF2 and hnRNP C as the mechanistic basis for activation-dependent alternative splicing of TRAF3 exon 8 and additional exons and uncover an intronic splicing silencer whose full activity depends on the precise location more than 300 nucleotides upstream of the regulated exon.
CITATION STYLE
Schultz, A.-S., Preussner, M., Bunse, M., Karni, R., & Heyd, F. (2017). Activation-Dependent TRAF3 Exon 8 Alternative Splicing Is Controlled by CELF2 and hnRNP C Binding to an Upstream Intronic Element. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 37(7). https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.00488-16
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.