TY - JOUR
T1 - The "alternative" choice of constitutive exons throughout evolution
AU - Lev-Maor, Galit
AU - Goren, Amir
AU - Sela, Noa
AU - Kim, Eddo
AU - Keren, Hadas
AU - Doron-Faigenboim, Adi
AU - Leibman-Barak, Shelly
AU - Pupko, Tal
AU - Ast, Gil
PY - 2007/11
Y1 - 2007/11
N2 - Alternative cassette exons are known to originate from two processes - exonization of intronic sequences and exon shuffling. Herein, we suggest an additional mechanism by which constitutively spliced exons become alternative cassette exons during evolution. We compiled a dataset of orthologous exons from human and mouse that are constitutively spliced in one species but alternatively spliced in the other. Examination of these exons suggests that the common ancestors were constitutively spliced. We show that relaxation of the 5′ splice site during evolution is one of the molecular mechanisms by which exons shift from constitutive to alternative splicing. This shift is associated with the fixation of exonic splicing regulatory sequences (ESRs) that are essential for exon definition and control the inclusion level only after the transition to alternative splicing. The effect of each ESR on splicing and the combinatorial effects between two ESRs are conserved from fish to human. Our results uncover an evolutionary pathway that increases transcriptome diversity by shifting exons from constitutive to alternative splicing.
AB - Alternative cassette exons are known to originate from two processes - exonization of intronic sequences and exon shuffling. Herein, we suggest an additional mechanism by which constitutively spliced exons become alternative cassette exons during evolution. We compiled a dataset of orthologous exons from human and mouse that are constitutively spliced in one species but alternatively spliced in the other. Examination of these exons suggests that the common ancestors were constitutively spliced. We show that relaxation of the 5′ splice site during evolution is one of the molecular mechanisms by which exons shift from constitutive to alternative splicing. This shift is associated with the fixation of exonic splicing regulatory sequences (ESRs) that are essential for exon definition and control the inclusion level only after the transition to alternative splicing. The effect of each ESR on splicing and the combinatorial effects between two ESRs are conserved from fish to human. Our results uncover an evolutionary pathway that increases transcriptome diversity by shifting exons from constitutive to alternative splicing.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=37349077216&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pgen.0030203
DO - 10.1371/journal.pgen.0030203
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AN - SCOPUS:37349077216
SN - 1553-7390
VL - 3
SP - 2221
EP - 2234
JO - PLoS Genetics
JF - PLoS Genetics
IS - 11
ER -