Litcius/Paper detail

Functional implications of CaMKII alternative splicing

Roman Sloutsky, Margaret M. Stratton

2020European Journal of Neuroscience38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is known to be a crucial regulator in the post-synapse during long-term potentiation. This important protein has been the subject of many studies centered on understanding memory at the molecular, cellular, and organismic level. CaMKII is encoded by four genes in humans, all of which undergo alternative splicing at the RNA level, leading to an enormous diversity of expressed proteins. Advances in sequencing technologies have facilitated the discovery of many new CaMKII transcripts. To date, newly discovered CaMKII transcripts have been incorporated into an ambiguous naming scheme. Herein, we review the initial experiments leading to the discovery of CaMKII and its subsequent variants. We propose the adoption of a new, unambiguous naming scheme for CaMKII variants. Finally, we discuss biological implications for CaMKII splice variants.

Topics & Concepts

Alternative splicingRNA splicingBiologyComputational biologyLong-term potentiationGeneRegulatorGeneticsNeuroscienceRNAGene isoformReceptorRNA Research and SplicingRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsMitochondrial Function and Pathology