[HTML][HTML] Dynamic antagonism between ETR-3 and PTB regulates cell type-specific alternative splicing

N Charlet-B, G Singh, TA Cooper, P Logan - Molecular cell, 2002 - cell.com
N Charlet-B, G Singh, TA Cooper, P Logan
Molecular cell, 2002cell.com
Inclusion of cardiac troponin T (cTNT) exon 5 in embryonic muscle requires conserved
flanking intronic elements (MSEs). ETR-3, a member of the CELF family, binds U/G motifs in
two MSEs and directly activates exon inclusion in vitro. Binding and activation by ETR-3 are
directly antagonized by polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTB). We use dominant-
negative mutants to demonstrate that endogenous CELF and PTB activities are required for
MSE-dependent activation and repression in muscle and nonmuscle cells, respectively …
Abstract
Inclusion of cardiac troponin T (cTNT) exon 5 in embryonic muscle requires conserved flanking intronic elements (MSEs). ETR-3, a member of the CELF family, binds U/G motifs in two MSEs and directly activates exon inclusion in vitro. Binding and activation by ETR-3 are directly antagonized by polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTB). We use dominant-negative mutants to demonstrate that endogenous CELF and PTB activities are required for MSE-dependent activation and repression in muscle and nonmuscle cells, respectively. Combined use of CELF and PTB dominant-negative mutants provides an in vivo demonstration that antagonistic splicing activities exist within the same cells. We conclude that cell-specific regulation results from the dominance of one among actively competing regulatory states rather than modulation of a nonregulated default state.
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