Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2176606 Developmental Cell 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•NSRs are nuclear speckle localized RNA-binding proteins expressed in lateral roots•NSRs control alternative splicing patterns of gene expression in response to auxin•The ASCO long noncoding RNA interacts with NSRs and displaces mRNA targets in vitro•lncRNAs can hijack nuclear AS regulators to modulate AS patterns during development

SummaryAlternative splicing (AS) of pre-mRNA represents a major mechanism underlying increased transcriptome and proteome complexity. Here, we show that the nuclear speckle RNA-binding protein (NSR) and the AS competitor long noncoding RNA (or ASCO-lncRNA) constitute an AS regulatory module. AtNSR-GFP translational fusions are expressed in primary and lateral root (LR) meristems. Double Atnsr mutants and ASCO overexpressors exhibit an altered ability to form LRs after auxin treatment. Interestingly, auxin induces a major change in AS patterns of many genes, a response largely dependent on NSRs. RNA immunoprecipitation assays demonstrate that AtNSRs interact not only with their alternatively spliced mRNA targets but also with the ASCO-RNA in vivo. The ASCO-RNA displaces an AS target from an NSR-containing complex in vitro. Expression of ASCO-RNA in Arabidopsis affects the splicing patterns of several NSR-regulated mRNA targets. Hence, lncRNA can hijack nuclear AS regulators to modulate AS patterns during development.

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