The landscape of human mutually exclusive splicing

  • Klas Hatje
  • Raza-Ur Rahman
  • Ramon O Vidal
  • Dominic Simm
  • Björn Hammesfahr
  • Vikas Bansal
  • Ashish Rajput
  • Michel Edwar Mickael
  • Ting Sun
  • Stefan Bonn
  • Martin Kollmar

Abstract

Mutually exclusive splicing of exons is a mechanism of functional gene and protein diversification with pivotal roles in organismal development and diseases such as Timothy syndrome, cardiomyopathy and cancer in humans. In order to obtain a first genomewide estimate of the extent and biological role of mutually exclusive splicing in humans, we predicted and subsequently validated mutually exclusive exons (MXEs) using 515 publically available RNA-Seq datasets. Here, we provide evidence for the expression of over 855 MXEs, 42% of which represent novel exons, increasing the annotated human mutually exclusive exome more than fivefold. The data provide strong evidence for the existence of large and multi-cluster MXEs in higher vertebrates and offer new insights into MXE evolution. More than 82% of the MXE clusters are conserved in mammals, and five clusters have homologous clusters in Drosophila Finally, MXEs are significantly enriched in pathogenic mutations and their spatio-temporal expression might predict human disease pathology.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer959
ISSN1744-4292
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 14.12.2017

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2017 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license.

PubMed 29242366