A mechanism for exon skipping caused by nonsense or missense mutations in BRCA1 and other genes

被引:372
作者
Liu, HX [1 ]
Cartegni, L [1 ]
Zhang, MQ [1 ]
Krainer, AR [1 ]
机构
[1] Cold Spring Harbor Lab, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1038/83762
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Point mutations can generate defective and sometimes harmful proteins. The nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway minimizes the potential damage caused by nonsense mutations(1-4). In-frame nonsense codons located at a minimum distance upstream of the last exon-exon junction are recognized as premature termination codons (PTCs), targeting the mRNA for degradation. Some nonsense mutations cause skipping of one or more exons, presumably during pre-mRNA splicing in the nucleus; this phenomenon is termed nonsense-mediated altered splicing (NAS), and its underlying mechanism is unclear(1,2,5,6). By analyzing NAS in BRCA1, we show here that inappropriate exon skipping can be reproduced in vitro, and results from disruption of a splicing enhancer in the coding sequence. Enhancers can be disrupted by single nonsense, missense and translationally silent point mutations, without recognition of an open reading frame as such. These results argue against a nuclear reading-frame scanning mechanism for NAS. Coding-region single-nucleotide polymorphisms(7) (cSNPs) within exonic splicing enhancers or silencers may affect the patterns or efficiency of mRNA splicing, which may in turn cause phenotypic variability and variable penetrance of mutations elsewhere in a gene.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 58
页数:4
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]   Mutations affecting mRNA splicing are the most common molecular defects in patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 [J].
Ars, E ;
Serra, E ;
García, J ;
Kruyer, H ;
Gaona, A ;
Lázaro, C ;
Estivill, X .
HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS, 2000, 9 (02) :237-247
[2]  
CACERES JF, 1997, EUKARYOTIC MRNA PROC, P174
[3]   Characterization of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in coding regions of human genes [J].
Cargill, M ;
Altshuler, D ;
Ireland, J ;
Sklar, P ;
Ardlie, K ;
Patil, N ;
Lane, CR ;
Lim, EP ;
Kalyanaraman, N ;
Nemesh, J ;
Ziaugra, L ;
Friedland, L ;
Rolfe, A ;
Warrington, J ;
Lipshutz, R ;
Daley, GQ ;
Lander, ES .
NATURE GENETICS, 1999, 22 (03) :231-238
[4]   The regulation of splice-site selection, and its role in human disease [J].
Cooper, TA ;
Mattox, W .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 1997, 61 (02) :259-266
[5]   Identification of a new class of exonic splicing enhancers by in vivo selection [J].
Coulter, LR ;
Landree, MA ;
Cooper, TA .
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 1997, 17 (04) :2143-2150
[6]   Missense and silent tau gene mutations cause frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism-chromosome 17 type, by affecting multiple alternative RNA splicing regulatory elements [J].
D'Souza, I ;
Poorkaj, P ;
Hong, M ;
Nochlin, D ;
Lee, VMY ;
Bird, TD ;
Schellenberg, GD .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1999, 96 (10) :5598-5603
[7]  
Dietz HC, 1997, AM J HUM GENET, V60, P729
[8]  
Gersappe A, 1999, MOL CELL BIOL, V19, P1640
[9]   A perfect message: RNA surveillance and nonsense-mediated decay [J].
Hentze, MW ;
Kulozik, AE .
CELL, 1999, 96 (03) :307-310
[10]   Interrelationships of the pathways of mRNA decay and translation in eukaryotic cells [J].
Jacobson, A ;
Peltz, SW .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 1996, 65 :693-739