Beyond DNA: RNA editing and steps toward Alu exonization in primates.

Möller-Krull M, Zemann A, Roos C, Brosius J, Schmitz J

Research article (journal)

Abstract

The exaptation of transposed elements into protein-coding domains by a process called exonization is one important evolutionary pathway for generating novel variant functions of gene products. Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) modification is a recently discovered, RNA-editing-mediated mechanism that contributes to the exonization of previously unprocessed mRNA introns. In the human nuclear prelamin A recognition factor gene transcript, the alternatively spliced exon 8 results from an A-to-I editing-generated 3' splice site located within an intronic Alu short interspersed element. Sequence comparisons of representatives of all primate infraorders revealed the critical evolutionary steps leading to this editing-mediated exonization. The source of exon 8 was seeded within the primary transcript about 58-40 million years ago by the head-to-head insertions of two primate-specific Alu short interspersed elements in the common ancestor of anthropoids. The latent protein-coding potential was realized 34-52 million years later in a common ancestor of gorilla, chimpanzee, and human as a result of numerous changes at the RNA and DNA level. Comparisons of 426 processed mRNA clones from various primate species with their genomic sequences identified seven different RNA-editing-mediated alternative splice variants. In total, 30 A-to-I editing sites were identified. The gorilla, chimpanzee, and human nuclear prelamin A recognition factor genes exemplify the versatile interplay of pre- and posttranscriptional modifications leading to novel genetic potential.

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Molecular Biology (J. Mol. Biol.)
Volume382
Issue3
Page range601-609
StatusPublished
Release year2008
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
KeywordsHumans; RNA Editing; Base Sequence; Introns; Nuclear Proteins; Sequence Alignment; Animals; Molecular Sequence Data; Alu Elements; Evolution; Primates; Exons; Humans; RNA Editing; Base Sequence; Introns; Nuclear Proteins; Sequence Alignment; Animals; Molecular Sequence Data; Alu Elements; Evolution; Primates; Exons

Authors from the University of Münster

Brosius, Jürgen
Institute of Experimental Pathology
Schmitz, Jürgen
Institute of Experimental Pathology

Habilitationen, aus denen die Publikation resultiert

Echoes from the Past: What Ancient Genomic Insertions say about the Phylogeny of Species
Candidate: Schmitz, Jürgen | Reviewers: Kurtz, Joachim
Period of time: 17/04/2012 - 25/04/2013
Habilitation procedure finished at: Habilitation procedure at University of Münster