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Biological relevance of alternative splicing in hematologic malignancies

Monika Szelest, Krzysztof Giannopoulos

2024Molecular Medicine11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Alternative splicing (AS) is a strictly regulated process that generates multiple mRNA variants from a single gene, thus contributing to proteome diversity. Transcriptome-wide sequencing studies revealed networks of functionally coordinated splicing events, which produce isoforms with distinct or even opposing functions. To date, several mechanisms of AS are deregulated in leukemic cells, mainly due to mutations in splicing and/or epigenetic regulators and altered expression of splicing factors (SFs). In this review, we discuss aberrant splicing events induced by mutations affecting SFs (SF3B1, U2AF1, SRSR2, and ZRSR2), spliceosome components (PRPF8, LUC7L2, DDX41, and HNRNPH1), and epigenetic modulators (IDH1 and IDH2). Finally, we provide an extensive overview of the biological relevance of aberrant isoforms of genes involved in the regulation of apoptosis (e. g. BCL-X, MCL-1, FAS, and c-FLIP), activation of key cellular signaling pathways (CASP8, MAP3K7, and NOTCH2), and cell metabolism (PKM).

Topics & Concepts

RNA splicingSpliceosomeBiologyAlternative splicingEpigeneticsComputational biologyTranscriptomeGene isoformGeneGeneticsCell biologyGene expressionRNARNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancerAcute Myeloid Leukemia Research
Biological relevance of alternative splicing in hematologic malignancies | Litcius