Structure, regulation, and evolution of the splicing machinery

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R35 · $518,851 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY The complexity of human splicing is daunting, yet intervention in splicing for treatment of diseases holds huge potential. Based on strong preliminary results, we propose three areas of investigation that leverage our group’s deep knowledge of splicing to address critical open questions, and to explore the potential for innovative engineering. The first area addresses the mechanism by which U2 snRNP captures the intron branchpoint early in spliceosome assembly, a step altered by recurrent cancer mutations and targeted in nature by antibiotic-producing bacteria. Using new reporters in which two branchpoints compete for recognition, we have identified a novel splicing fidelity mechanism we call “NO-BP decay,” in which U2 complexes that fail due to aberrant branchpoint selection are destroyed. We will characterize this process, applying a battery of candidate gene-based suppressor screens and biochemical tests in splicing extracts. The second area of investigation addresses how splicing is integrated with transcription and cell growth at the individual gene and cellular levels, an emerging area in need of innovation if splicing is to be successfully engineered. Preliminary results indicate that yeast cells have a limited capacity for splicing that creates competition for pre-mRNAs that is critical to cell function. We will measure both splicing capacity and the dynamics of competition, using RNA sequencing to develop a predictive model that explains how splicing is coordinated at a systems level. To understand the contribution of individual genes to this system we are applying synthetic biology approaches. We have engineered site-specific pauses of RNA polymerase II and shown that they alter splicing efficiency and alternative splicing, by unknown mechanism(s) that we will dissect. We will also explore in detail the role of splicing noise (stochastic variations in splicing output over time) on the ability of splicing to control stable homeostatic expression settings (as it does in many RNA binding protein genes) as well as to control a bistable switch (as it does in the Drosophila Sex lethal gene). These experiments will define the operational principles of simple splicing regulatory circuits. The third area of investigation is focused on the process of intron gain and its roles in eukaryotic gene creation and gene diversification. Our recent discovery that the spliceosome can convert the lariat intron to a true intron circle after splicing indicates that it can carry out reverse splicing reactions in vivo, raising questions about whether and how it might promote formation of new introns. We propose to test biochemical steps predicted to be necessary for spliceosome-mediated intron gain, and have already set up experiments to document intron gain in vivo. Given the fundamental conservation of the splicing machinery, this work promises to translate directly into new understanding of the mechanisms of gene regulation in eukaryotes, in...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10406517
Project number
1R35GM145266-01
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA CRUZ
Principal Investigator
Manuel Ares
Activity code
R35
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$518,851
Award type
1
Project period
2022-05-16 → 2027-04-30