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Splicing-accessible coding 3′UTRs control protein stability and interaction networks

Marco Preußner, Qingsong Gao, Eliot Morrison, Olga Herdt, Florian Finkernagel, Michael Schümann, Eberhard Krause, Christian Freund, Wei Chen, Florian Heyd

2020Genome biology33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: 3'-Untranslated regions (3'UTRs) play crucial roles in mRNA metabolism, such as by controlling mRNA stability, translation efficiency, and localization. Intriguingly, in some genes the 3'UTR is longer than their coding regions, pointing to additional, unknown functions. Here, we describe a protein-coding function of 3'UTRs upon frameshift-inducing alternative splicing in more than 10% of human and mouse protein-coding genes. RESULTS: 3'UTR-encoded amino acid sequences show an enrichment of PxxP motifs and lead to interactome rewiring. Furthermore, an elevated proline content increases protein disorder and reduces protein stability, thus allowing splicing-controlled regulation of protein half-life. This could also act as a surveillance mechanism for erroneous skipping of penultimate exons resulting in transcripts that escape nonsense mediated decay. The impact of frameshift-inducing alternative splicing on disease development is emphasized by a retinitis pigmentosa-causing mutation leading to translation of a 3'UTR-encoded, proline-rich, destabilized frameshift-protein with altered protein-protein interactions. CONCLUSIONS: We describe a widespread, evolutionarily conserved mechanism that enriches the mammalian proteome, controls protein expression and protein-protein interactions, and has important implications for the discovery of novel, potentially disease-relevant protein variants.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyRNA splicingFrameshift mutationGeneticsAlternative splicingExonUntranslated regionFive prime untranslated regionExonic splicing enhancerProteomeCoding regionGeneNonsense-mediated decayTranslation (biology)Computational biologyCell biologyMessenger RNARNARNA Research and SplicingRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA modifications and cancer