Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.

Alternative splicing patterns are known to vary between tissues but these patterns have been found to be predominantly peculiar to one species or another, implying only a limited function in fundamental neural biology. Here we used high-throughput RT-PCR to monitor the expression pattern of all the...

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Main Authors: Alicia Madgwick, Philippe Fort, Peter S Hanson, Philippe Thibault, Marie-Claude Gaudreau, Georges Lutfalla, Tarik Möröy, Sherif Abou Elela, Bill Chaudhry, David J Elliott, Christopher M Morris, Julian P Venables
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4438066?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-78273da63e0c42d6b4254c62defbdd132020-11-25T02:27:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01105e012599810.1371/journal.pone.0125998Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.Alicia MadgwickPhilippe FortPeter S HansonPhilippe ThibaultMarie-Claude GaudreauGeorges LutfallaTarik MöröySherif Abou ElelaBill ChaudhryDavid J ElliottChristopher M MorrisJulian P VenablesAlternative splicing patterns are known to vary between tissues but these patterns have been found to be predominantly peculiar to one species or another, implying only a limited function in fundamental neural biology. Here we used high-throughput RT-PCR to monitor the expression pattern of all the annotated simple alternative splicing events (ASEs) in the Reference Sequence Database, in different mouse tissues and identified 93 brain-specific events that shift from one isoform to another (switch-like) between brain and other tissues. Consistent with an important function, regulation of a core set of 9 conserved switch-like ASEs is highly conserved, as they have the same pattern of tissue-specific splicing in all vertebrates tested: human, mouse and zebrafish. Several of these ASEs are embedded within genes that encode proteins associated with the neuronal microtubule network, and show a dramatic and concerted shift within a short time window of human neural stem cell differentiation. Similarly these exons are dynamically regulated in zebrafish development. These data demonstrate that although alternative splicing patterns often vary between species, there is nonetheless a core set of vertebrate brain-specific ASEs that are conserved between species and associated with neural differentiation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4438066?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alicia Madgwick
Philippe Fort
Peter S Hanson
Philippe Thibault
Marie-Claude Gaudreau
Georges Lutfalla
Tarik Möröy
Sherif Abou Elela
Bill Chaudhry
David J Elliott
Christopher M Morris
Julian P Venables
spellingShingle Alicia Madgwick
Philippe Fort
Peter S Hanson
Philippe Thibault
Marie-Claude Gaudreau
Georges Lutfalla
Tarik Möröy
Sherif Abou Elela
Bill Chaudhry
David J Elliott
Christopher M Morris
Julian P Venables
Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alicia Madgwick
Philippe Fort
Peter S Hanson
Philippe Thibault
Marie-Claude Gaudreau
Georges Lutfalla
Tarik Möröy
Sherif Abou Elela
Bill Chaudhry
David J Elliott
Christopher M Morris
Julian P Venables
author_sort Alicia Madgwick
title Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
title_short Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
title_full Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
title_fullStr Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
title_full_unstemmed Neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
title_sort neural differentiation modulates the vertebrate brain specific splicing program.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Alternative splicing patterns are known to vary between tissues but these patterns have been found to be predominantly peculiar to one species or another, implying only a limited function in fundamental neural biology. Here we used high-throughput RT-PCR to monitor the expression pattern of all the annotated simple alternative splicing events (ASEs) in the Reference Sequence Database, in different mouse tissues and identified 93 brain-specific events that shift from one isoform to another (switch-like) between brain and other tissues. Consistent with an important function, regulation of a core set of 9 conserved switch-like ASEs is highly conserved, as they have the same pattern of tissue-specific splicing in all vertebrates tested: human, mouse and zebrafish. Several of these ASEs are embedded within genes that encode proteins associated with the neuronal microtubule network, and show a dramatic and concerted shift within a short time window of human neural stem cell differentiation. Similarly these exons are dynamically regulated in zebrafish development. These data demonstrate that although alternative splicing patterns often vary between species, there is nonetheless a core set of vertebrate brain-specific ASEs that are conserved between species and associated with neural differentiation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4438066?pdf=render
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