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Molecular and Cellular Biology, June 2000, p. 4036-4048, Vol. 20, No. 11
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Aberrant Splicing of tau Pre-mRNA Caused by Intronic Mutations
Associated with the Inherited Dementia Frontotemporal Dementia with
Parkinsonism Linked to Chromosome 17
Zhihong
Jiang,1
Jocelyn
Cote,1
Jennifer M.
Kwon,2
Alison M.
Goate,3 and
Jane Y.
Wu1,4,*
Department of
Pediatrics,1 Department of
Neurology,2 Departments of Psychiatry & Genetics,3 and Department of Molecular
Biology and Pharmacology,4 Washington University
School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110
Received 4 November 1999/Returned for modification 8 December
1999/Accepted 1 March 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Frontotemporal dementia accounts for a significant fraction of
dementia cases. Frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to
chromosome 17 is associated with either exonic or intronic mutations in
the tau gene. This highlights the involvement of aberrant pre-mRNA
splicing in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders. Little is
known about the molecular mechanisms of the splicing defects underlying
these diseases. To establish a model system for studying the role of
pre-mRNA splicing in neurodegenerative diseases, we have constructed a
tau minigene that reproduces tau alternative splicing in both cultured
cells and in vitro biochemical assays. We demonstrate that mutations in
a nonconserved intronic region of the human tau gene lead to increased
splicing between exon 10 and exon 11. Systematic biochemical analyses
indicate the importance of U1 snRNP and, to a lesser extent, U6 snRNP
in differentially recognizing wild-type versus intron mutant tau pre-mRNAs. Gel mobility shift assays with purified U1 snRNP and oligonucleotide-directed RNase H cleavage experiments support the idea
that the intronic mutations destabilize a stem-loop structure that
sequesters the 5' splice site downstream of exon 10 in tau pre-mRNA,
leading to increases in U1 snRNP binding and in splicing between exon
10 and exon 11. Thus, mutations in nonconserved intronic regions that
increase rather than decrease alternative splicing can be an important
pathogenic mechanism for the development of human diseases.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
tau is a major microtubule
(MT)-binding protein that promotes MT assembly and stabilizes the MT
tracks (for reviews, see references 26, 27, 43, and
44). The tau gene is expressed in developing and
mature neurons and is especially enriched in the axon. A low level of
tau expression is also found in glial cells. In addition to
posttranslational regulation by phosphorylation, expression and
function of the tau gene are under complex regulation by alternative splicing. In the human brain, alternative splicing produces six isoforms with variations in the amino-terminal region and in the carboxyl domain, containing either three or four MT-binding repeats (MT1 to MT4) (1, 19, 35, 40). This expression pattern results from a combination of alternative inclusion of exon 2 or exons
2 and 3 in the amino-terminal region and of exon 10 in the MT-binding
domain of the carboxyl-terminal region. Exclusion or inclusion of exon
10 leads to the formation of tau proteins containing either three or
four MT-binding repeats. In the normal human adult cerebral cortex, the
ratio of four- to three-MT-binding repeat-containing tau transcripts
(Tau4R/Tau3R) is approximately 1 (see Fig. 2) (15, 16, 18, 29,
30).
A large number of studies have suggested that changes in the tau
protein play a critical role in neurodegeneration (reviewed in
references 17, 35, 41, 61, 62). tau-containing
neurofibrillary lesions are found in myotonic dystrophy, Pick's
disease, corticobasal degeneration and progressive supranuclear palsy.
In addition, several other neurodegenerative diseases have
intraneuronal lesions containing aberrantly processed tau protein,
including Niemann-Pick disease type C, Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker
disease with tangles, prion protein amyloid angiopathy, amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis-parkinsonism-dementia complex of Guam, Down syndrome,
and familial presenile dementia with tangles (reference
61 and references therein). Recent genetic studies
have placed the tau gene at the center of pathogenesis of
frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17), an autosomal dominant condition characterized by prominent
atrophy of the frontal and temporal cortex with later involvement of
subcortical structures (14). The brain atrophy is usually
accompanied by neuronal cell death, gliosis, and formation of
intraneuronal deposits containing tau protein. Missense mutations in
the tau gene have been identified in FTDP-17 cases, and several of
these mutations lead to a reduction in the ability of tau to bind MT
and to promote MT assembly (24, 29-31, 50). In addition to
mutations found in the coding region of the tau gene, several intronic
mutations were identified, accounting for a significant fraction of
FTDP-17 cases (Fig. 1A) (for reviews, see references 16 and 61). All of the intronic
mutations reported so far are associated with increases in the ratio of
four- to three-repeat-containing isoforms of tau (Tau4R/Tau3R). This
suggests that a proper ratio of Tau4R to Tau3R is essential for normal
function of tau in the human brain and that disturbance of this
delicate balance may lead to deleterious effects on neuronal survival
and function. A change in the Tau4R/Tau3R ratio appears to be
sufficient for development of the filamentous tauopathy (16, 32,
61). Discovery of these intronic mutations in the tau gene in
dementia patients highlights the importance for normal brain function
of controlling the balance of different tau isoforms by alternative splicing.
Based on analyses of the nucleotide sequence of the tau gene and the
observation that intronic mutations increase inclusion of exon 10 in
the tau transcripts, a hypothesis was proposed that a stem-loop-type
secondary structure may form in the tau pre-mRNA around the exon-intron
junction that could regulate tau exon 10 alternative splicing (6,
30, 63). In this study, we have established a minigene model
system to examine tau alternative splicing using both cell culture and
in vitro biochemical assays. We have tested the splicing efficiency of
wild-type and mutant tau pre-mRNAs containing either DDPAC+14 or
AusI+16 intronic mutations and demonstrated that the intronic mutations
enhance splicing of exon 10 without affecting RNA stability. Systematic
analyses using biochemical approaches indicate that among the different spliceosomal U snRNPs, U1 snRNP plays a prominent role in
differentially recognizing wild-type versus intronic mutant tau
pre-mRNAs and that U6 snRNP also appears to be involved in this
process. A gel mobility shift assay with purified U1 snRNP preparations
demonstrates a significantly higher level of U1 snRNP binding to the
mutant tau than to the wild-type tau pre-mRNA. Our data support the
model in which base-pairing interactions between the intronic sequence downstream of exon 10 and the splice junction itself prevent maximal recognition of this 5' splice site. Partial disruption of these base-pairing interactions by intronic mutations leads to enhanced U1
snRNP interaction with the 5' splice site of exon 10 and therefore higher splicing efficiency. To our knowledge, this is the first study
with systematic biochemical characterization of a human disease-causing
alternative splicing event in which intronic mutations increase rather
than decrease splicing efficiency.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids.
The tau genomic DNA fragments containing exons 9, 10, and 11 as well as intronic sequences (wild type or mutant) flanking exon 10 were amplified by PCR from normal adult human or FTDP-17 patient brain genomic DNA. tau minigene constructs were made by inserting the genomic fragments into mammalian expression vector pcDNA3 (Invitrogen) between the HindIII and
XhoI sites under the control of the cytomegalovirus
promoter. DNA sequence analysis of tau genomic fragments and different
expression plasmids was carried out on an ABI 373A automatic sequencer
using the PRISM Ready Reaction DyeDeoxy Terminator cycle sequencing kit
(Applied Biosystems).
Cell culture and transient transfection.
For transfection
experiments, all plasmid DNA samples were purified by double cesium
chloride centrifugation. HeLa RB or N2a cells were grown in 3.5-cm
dishes in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10%
fetal calf serum. At the time of transfection, HeLa RB cells were
approximately 50% confluent and N2a cells were approximately 60%
confluent. Transfection was performed by the calcium phosphate
precipitation method with 2 to 3 µg of tau minigene construct DNA.
Cells were harvested 48 h after transfection. Under these
conditions, the transfection efficiency in these experiments was
approximately 60% for HeLa RB cells and 50% for N2a cells.
RT-PCR assay.
RNA was prepared from different tissues or
transfected HeLa RB or N2a cells with Trizol reagent (Gibco-BRL), and
reverse transcription (RT)-PCR was carried out in the presence of
[
-32P]dCTP (Amersham Life Sciences) as previously
described (68). Human or murine and rat tau-specific primers
in exon 9 and exon 11 were used to detect the endogenous tau mRNA.
Alternatively spliced tau products expressed from the transfected
minigene were detected by RT-PCR with primers specific to the
transfected plasmid (T7 and SP6 primers). The PCR cycle number was kept
to a minimum (20 cycles) to maintain linearity. The ratio of tau exon
10+ (Tau4R) to tau exon 10
(Tau3R) was
measured with a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics).
Transcription and splicing.
Splicing substrates were
synthesized using T7 RNA polymerase (Promega) from corresponding linear
templates, with catabolite gene activator protein analog (Pharmacia
Biotech) and [
-32P]UTP (Amersham Life Sciences). RNA
purification was performed as described before (5). HeLa
cell nuclear extracts were prepared as described before (8).
Some preparations yielded very low splicing activity for
uncharacterized reasons and allowed only the first step of the splicing
reaction to occur when incubated for 2 h at 30°C. It was
observed previously that these extracts could be rendered fully active
by the addition of 2 U of creatine kinase per 25-µl splicing reaction
mixture (7). Splicing mixtures were set up and processed as
described before (45). Splicing products were separated on 7 or 8% acrylamide (acrylamide-bisacrylamide, 38:2)-8 M urea gels. The
identity of lariat intermediates was confirmed by performing
debranching reactions in S100 extracts followed by gel migration.
Oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage assay.
Minigene
constructs TauEx10+11 and TauEx10+11d5 were linearized with
EcoRI (Promega) and transcribed into RNA with T7 RNA polymerase. [
-32P]UTP-labeled wild-type and mutant
RNAs were incubated at 37°C for 20 min in standard splicing buffer in
the presence of 0.5 U of RNase H (Gibco-BRL) in 12.5-µl reaction
mixtures with various concentrations of an oligonucleotide
(5'-GAAGGTACTCACACTGCC-3') complementary to the exon 10 splice donor site. When assays were performed in the presence of
nuclear extracts, RNAs were incubated with nuclear extract for the
indicated times in the presence of RNase H and 0.2 pmol of
oligonucleotide. These concentrations of oligonucleotide and RNase H
were used so that differences in cleavage between the wild-type and
mutant tau RNAs were not masked by excessive amounts of oligonucleotide
or RNase H. Cleaved RNA products were then separated on a 6%
polyacrylamide-8 M urea gel. The cleavage ratios were measured with a
PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics).
U snRNP inactivation and blocking assays.
U1 snRNA was
either inactivated using oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage as
described above or blocked by incubation with
2'-O-methyl-oligoribonucleotides. Specifically,
2'-O-methyl-oligonucleotides (U1, 3 to 12 µM; U2, 0.3 µM; U5, 12 µM; U6, 13 µM) were added to splicing reaction
mixtures and incubated at 30°C for 10 min prior to the addition of
RNA substrates (55). Incubations were then carried on for
1.5 h at 30°C in the presence or absence of creatine kinase (1 U). In the absence of creatine kinase, splicing reactions with this
particular HeLa nuclear extract did not efficiently proceed through the
second step of the splicing reaction. As a control, a
2'-O-methyl-oligonucleotide against U7 was used (6 µM).
HeLa cell nuclear extracts depleted of U1 snRNP activity were produced
by incubation at 30°C for 1 h in the presence of RNase H and the
oligonucleotide CCAGGTAAGTAT, complementary to the 5' end of
U1 snRNA (3). As a control, a mock-treated nuclear extract
was obtained by incubation with RNase H and an unrelated oligonucleotide. Splicing products were processed as before and resolved on 8% denaturing gels. Aliquots of the mock- and U1
oligonucleotide-treated nuclear extracts were incubated with proteinase
K (1 mg/ml) for 30 min at 37°C, extracted with phenol, and ethanol
precipitated. The extracted RNAs were then run on an 8%
polyacrylamide-8 M urea gel and visualized by ethidium bromide
staining to assess the efficiency of RNase H cleavage.
U1 snRNP protection assay.
Splicing reactions were carried
out with 2 fmol of 32P-labeled-tau pre-mRNA transcripts
with U1-depleted or mock-treated nuclear extracts at 30°C for 0, 10, or 20 min. RNase H (0.4 U) and 20 pmol (molar excess) of the
oligonucleotide complementary to the 5' splice site of exon 10 (GAAGGTACTCACACTGCC) were then added to 12.5-µl splicing
reaction mixtures (11), and incubation was continued for 15 min at 37°C to completely cleave the pre-mRNA transcripts that were
not protected. U1 snRNP- or mock-depleted extracts were prepared as
described above.
U1 binding assay.
The U1 snRNP preparation was a kind gift
from A. Kramer, and its purification and characterization were
described previously (37, 38). The major snRNA species
detected in the preparation is U1 snRNA. 32P-labeled
pre-mRNA transcripts from constructs TauEx10+11d5wt and -DDPAC were
incubated under splicing conditions with various amounts of purified U1
snRNP at 30°C for 5 min except that no ATP or creatine phosphate was
added. Heparin was then added to a final concentration of 0.5 mg/ml,
and reaction mixtures were incubated at 30°C for an additional 5 min.
The RNA-U1 snRNP complexes were resolved on 4% nondenaturing
polyacrylamide gels (acrylamide-bisacrylamide, 80:1), and
electrophoresis was carried out in Tris-glycine buffer (50 mM Tris, 50 mM glycine) (34).
 |
RESULTS |
Alternative splicing of tau exon 10.
To understand alternative
splicing regulation of genes involved in neuronal function and
neurodegeneration, we have initiated a study of tau pre-mRNA
alternative splicing. Because all of the intronic mutations identified
so far in the tau gene are in the intron following exon 10 and many
exonic mutations are also located in exon 10 (6, 25, 30,
63), we have focused our efforts on this region of the human tau
gene (Fig. 1A). Based on our previous experience (33, 68) we established a specific and sensitive RT-PCR protocol to examine tau alternative splicing in tissues or
cultured cells. This allowed us to reliably measure the level of
inclusion or exclusion of tau exon 10 in human brain tissues and in
cultured cell lines. A number of human or rodent cell lines of neural
as well as nonneural origin were screened. The tau alternative splicing
pattern detected in these cell lines was compared with that in adult
human and rat brain tissues. Consistent with previous studies (30,
35), endogenous tau expression was mostly restricted to cell
lines derived from neural tissues. tau expression was also detected in
embryonic kidney cell lines HEK293 and 293T in addition to neural cell
lines such as SH-SY5Y, N2a, and GT1-7. In the adult human brain, the
ratio of Tau3R to Tau4R is approximately 1 (Fig.
2A, lane 6) (30). However, in
the adult rat brain, Tau4R is the predominant tau RNA transcript (Fig.
2A, lane 9). This suggests that alternative splicing regulation of the
tau gene in human brain is different from that in rat brain.

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FIG. 1.
(A) Positions of reported mutations in exon 10 or the
downstream intron region of the human tau gene. The first nucleotide in
the intron is defined as position +1. 5' SS, 5' splice site. (B)
Schematic of a series of tau minigene constructs. The genomic DNA
fragments containing exons 9, 10, and 11 as well as intronic sequences
(wild type [wt], AusI, or DDPAC) flanking exon 10 were inserted in
mammalian expression vector pcDNA3 under the control of the
cytomegalovirus promoter (PCMV). The chimeric minigene
constructs Ad-TauEx10+11wt and -DDPAC were made by replacing the
upstream exon 9 and associated intronic sequences with the first exon
region (L1) of the adenovirus (Ad) major late transcription unit. The
sizes of the corresponding exons and introns are indicated above the
respective regions (in base pairs).
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FIG. 2.
tau alternative splicing in tissues and cell lines. (A)
Expression of endogenous tau exon 10+ (Tau4R) and exon
10 (Tau3R) mRNAs in the adult human brain, rat brain, and
human (HeLa, 293T, HEK293, HeLa RB, and SH-SY5Y) and murine (N2a and
GT1-7) cell lines as determined by RT-PCR with specific primers in exon
9 and exon 11 of human or rat and mouse tau. (B) Alternative splicing
of exon 10 from transfected wild-type (WT) and mutant tau minigenes
(AusI and DDPAC). The tau minigene constructs (TauEx9+11d5) with
wild-type and mutant intronic sequences were transfected into HeLa RB
and N2a cells. Alternatively spliced tau products expressed from the
transfected minigene were detected by RT-PCR with primers specific to
the transfected plasmids (T7 and SP6 primers). The percentage of Tau4R
(exon 10 inclusion) in the total splicing products was measured using a
PhosphorImager.
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Intronic mutations affect exon 10 alternative splicing.
tau
minigenes were constructed by using genomic DNA fragments containing
intact exons 9, 10, and 11 with shortened flanking intronic sequences
(Fig. 1B, TauEx9-11wt and TauEx9-11d5wt). These tau minigenes, when
introduced into either HeLa RB or N2a cells, underwent alternative
splicing similar to that seen in the human adult brain, with the
formation of both Tau3R and Tau4R (data not shown) (Fig. 2B, lanes 1 and 2 and 7 and 8). We therefore concluded that the minimal
TauEx9-11d5wt minigene with a total of 800 bp of tau genomic DNA
sequence contains cis elements essential for tau exon 10 alternative splicing. We noticed that transfected tau minigenes in
these cells produced a slightly higher level of Tau4R compared to the
endogenous tau expression pattern (Fig. 2), suggesting that
overexpression of the tau minigene may titrate certain limiting factors
controlling the ratio of Tau3R to Tau4R.
Derivatives of tau minigenes containing the FTDP-17-associated
mutations AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 were then constructed (Fig.
1B,
TauEx9-11AusI and -DDPAC and TauEx9-11d5AusI and -DDPAC, respectively).
These intronic mutant tau minigenes were introduced into either
HeLa RB
or N2a cells. The tau splicing pattern in these transfected
cells was
examined by RT-PCR. Both AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 derivatives
led to
predominantly Tau4R production when transiently expressed
in these cell
lines (data not shown) (Fig.
2B, lanes 3 to 6 and
lanes 9 to 12), as
detected in brain tissues of FTDP-17 patients
(
30;
Z. Jiang and J. Y. Wu, unpublished data). This observation
suggests that the AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 intronic mutations in the
tau
gene most likely mediate their effect by affecting exon 10
alternative
splicing and that
cis elements required to observe
the
mutant profile were present in our TauEx9-11d5 minigene. However,
these
results, similar to previous studies (
6,
8,
23,
30,
63),
could not rule out the possibility that differences
in RNA stability
contributed to the alternative splicing difference.
Therefore, we
tested whether the AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 mutations
affected the RNA
stability of tau pre-mRNA transcripts both in
transfected cells and in
an in vitro biochemical assay. Specifically,
following transfections,
cells were treated with actinomycin D
to block transcription, and
levels of tau pre-mRNA and mRNA transcripts
were then quantified at
different time points by RT-PCR. No significant
difference in RNA
stability was detected between wild-type and
AusI+16 or DDPAC+14
pre-mRNAs (Fig.
3). We also compared the
stability
of tau wild-type and mutant pre-mRNAs using in
vitro-synthesized
and radiolabeled transcripts. Following incubation
with HeLa nuclear
extracts for different periods of time, the tau
pre-mRNA and splicing
products were separated by gel electrophoresis.
The levels of
the RNA transcripts were then quantified with a
PhosphorImager.
Again, no difference was detected in the stability of
wild-type
and mutant tau transcripts (Fig.
4 and
5).
These results demonstrated
that the effects of these FTDP-17 intronic
mutations on tau alternative
splicing were not due to differential RNA
stability.

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FIG. 3.
Intronic mutations do not affect the RNA stability of
tau transcripts. Wild-type (WT) and mutant (AusI+16 and DDPAC+14) tau
minigenes were transfected into N2a cells. Following transfections,
cells were treated with actinomycin D to block transcription, and tau
pre-mRNA and mRNA transcripts were then detected at different time
points by RT-PCR (A). The tau transcripts were quantified using a
PhosphorImager. RNA stability was expressed as the ratio of total tau
transcripts at different time points to that at time zero (B).
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FIG. 4.
Intronic mutations affect exon 10 alternative splicing.
In vitro splicing of TauEx10+11d5wt and mutant substrates. Labeled
pre-mRNA substrates were incubated in HeLa nuclear extracts
(approximately 6 µg/µl) under splicing conditions for the times
indicated.
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FIG. 5.
Oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage assays support
a potential secondary structure around the 5' splice site of exon 10. (A) The stem-loop structure formed with exon 10 downstream intronic
sequences. The mutations AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 are indicated. (B, C, and
D). Oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage assays. Minigene
constructs of TauEx10+11 (B) and TauEx10+11d5 (C and D) were linearized
with EcoRI and transcribed into RNA with T7 RNA polymerase.
Labeled wild-type (WT) and mutant (AusI and DDPAC) tau RNAs were
incubated with RNase H at 37°C for 20 min under splicing conditions
in the presence of various concentrations of the oligonucleotide
complementary to the 5' splice site. The line with an arrowhead over
the stem-loop shows the position of the oligonucleotide used (A).
TauEx10+11 constructs contain a cryptic 5' splice site, as indicated by
the asterisk (B). (D) RNase H cleavage assay carried out under splicing
conditions with 0.2 pmol of the oligonucleotide in the presence of HeLa
nuclear extract (1.6 µg/µl). In this experiment, tau transcripts,
the oligonucleotide, the nuclear extract, and RNase H were mixed
together prior to incubation at 37°C for the time indicated in
minutes). The uncut RNA and products of cleavage at the exon 10 splice
donor site are shown on the right, while the products resulting from
the cryptic site are marked on the left (B). Quantification of the RNA
cleavage products in panel B is shown in panels E (cleavage at the
authentic site) and F (cleavage at the cryptic site). Panels G and H
show the quantification of RNA cleavage products in panels C and D,
respectively. The efficiency of cleavage was expressed as the ratio of
total cleavage products to the corresponding input transcript as
measured using a PhosphorImager.
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To investigate the biochemical mechanism by which the intronic
mutations affected tau exon 10 alternative splicing, we set
up an in
vitro splicing system using tau minigenes. When incubated
under
splicing conditions in HeLa nuclear extracts, the TauEx9-11d5wt
and
mutant substrates both yielded only the Tau3R (exon 10 skipping)
mRNAs,
with no detectable Tau4R (exon 10 inclusion) mRNAs (data
not shown).
This could be explained by the fact that the 3' splice
site upstream of
exon 10 as well as the 5' splice site of exon
9 are both divergent from
consensus sequences, and therefore these
splicing signals are too weak
to be recognized by the splicing
machinery in vitro. Therefore, we
replaced the upstream exon 9
and associated intronic sequences for the
first exon region (L1)
of the adenovirus (Ad) major late transcription
unit (Fig.
1B,
Ad-TauEx10+11wt and -DDPAC). Even with this chimeric
substrate,
we were able to detect only a low level of exon 10 inclusion
in
the wild-type tau substrate and a slight enhancement of exon 10
inclusion with the DDPAC+14 derivative (data not shown). We then
used
single-intron substrates to determine which tau splicing
unit (9-10 or
10-11) was specifically affected by these intronic
mutations (Fig.
1B,
TauEx9-10d5 and TauEx10+11d5). Neither DDPAC+14
nor AusI+16 intronic
mutations affected splicing between exon
9 and exon 10 (data not
shown). However, splicing between exons
10 and 11 was significantly
enhanced by AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 mutations,
because significantly
higher levels of splicing intermediates
or products can be detected at
various time points (Fig.
4, compare
lanes 3 and 5 with lane 1 or lanes
4 and 6 with lane 2). This
result suggests that AusI+16 and DDPAC+14
intronic mutations increase
specific recognition of the sequence around
the 5' splice site
of exon 10 by the splicing
machinery.
Oligonucleotide-directed RNase H cleavage experiments support the
presence of a secondary structure around the 5' splice site of exon
10.
It has been proposed in previous studies that the tau exon 10 splice donor region could form a stem-loop structure with downstream intronic sequences. This stem-loop model was first proposed based on
sequence analysis and exon-trapping experiments where exon 10 was
inserted with minimal intronic sequence into a heterologous splicing
cassette (6, 23, 30, 63). In this model (Fig. 5A), there are
base-pairing interactions between the nucleotide residues surrounding
the 5' splice site of exon 10 in the region that extends from positions
2 to +16 (with the first G nucleotide in the intron being +1). In
wild-type tau pre-mRNA, this structure would contain at least six
uninterrupted base pairs, whereas in either AusI+16 or DDPAC+14 mutant
tau pre-mRNA, a G-C interaction is disrupted in the stem region,
presumably leading to a less stable structure. More recently, nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy was employed to demonstrate that short
RNA oligonucleotides corresponding to this region of tau pre-mRNA could
form a stable, folded stem-loop structure in the absence of protein
factors (65). However, it is not clear whether such a
secondary structure exists in the longer tau pre-mRNA transcripts under
splicing conditions or whether the splicing machinery indeed
differentially recognizes wild-type versus mutant tau pre-mRNA transcripts.
We probed the potential secondary structure of the wild-type and mutant
tau gene in the region around the exon 10 5' splice
site using an
oligonucleotide-directed RNase H cleavage assay
with a specific DNA
oligonucleotide (illustrated in Fig.
5A) complementary
to the 5' splice
site region. To avoid complication of splicing
products (when the assay
was performed in the presence of nuclear
extract) and nonspecific
cleavage, we used shorter RNA transcripts.
With tau transcripts
containing exon 10 and 261 nucleotides of
downstream intronic
sequences, both DDPAC+14 and AusI+16 mutant
tau consistently showed
significantly more cleavage products than
wild-type tau. Consistently,
RNase H cleavage at a cryptic splice
site downstream of the authentic
5' splice site occurred at a
lower level in the mutant than in the
wild-type transcripts (Fig.
5B and F). These data are consistent with
an increased accessibility
of the sequence around the 5' splice site to
the oligodeoxynucleotide-mediated
RNase H cleavage in the mutant tau
transcripts (Fig.
5B). These
results support the idea that a secondary
structure forms around
the 5' splice site of exon 10, reducing the
binding of the oligonucleotide
and, therefore, the efficiency of RNase
H cleavage. Destabilization
of this secondary structure by the DDPAC+14
or AusI+16 mutations
increases cleavage by RNase H. To further define
this potential
secondary structure, we made additional truncations in
the intron.
Shortening this intronic sequence downstream of the 5'
splice
site to 53 nucleotides did not affect the differential RNase H
cleavage of wild-type and mutant tau transcripts (Fig.
5C and
G),
consistent with the observation that these shortened tau minigene
constructs behave similarly to those with longer intron sequences
(data
not shown). Finally, the RNase H cleavage assay was carried
out in the
presence of HeLa nuclear extract. Again, as was observed
in the absence
of nuclear extract, there were significantly more
cleavage products in
the reactions with DDPAC+14 or AusI+16 tau
transcripts than in those
with the wild-type tau transcript (Fig.
5D and H). Quantification of
the cleavage products at different
oligonucleotide concentrations and
at different time points clearly
indicates that wild-type and intronic
mutant (DDPAC+14 as well
as AusI+16) tau RNAs have distinct
susceptibilities to the RNase
H cleavage. Because the oligonucleotide
used in the RNase H cleavage
assay does not extend to the position of
these mutations (+14
for DDPAC and +16 for AusI; Fig.
5A) and because
the difference
in cleavage efficiency between the wild-type and mutant
RNAs was
detectable in the absence of other protein factors or
spliceosomal
components, these data are best explained by the
difference in
the RNA secondary structure. Taken together, these
results support
the hypothesis that at the U1 snRNP binding site around
the 5'
splice site downstream of exon 10 there exists a secondary
structure
involving 53 or fewer intronic nucleotides. This secondary
structure
could form on naked tau pre-mRNA transcripts as well as with
tau
transcripts in the presence of splicing-competent nuclear extracts.
This structure is altered in the DDPAC+14 and AusI+16 mutants
so that
base-pairing interaction in the stem is weakened and the
accessibility
of the oligonucleotide is increased, leading to
enhanced RNase H
cleavage in the reaction mixtures containing
the mutant tau
transcripts.
U1 and U6 snRNPs are important players in differential recognition
of tau wild-type and mutant pre-mRNAs.
To dissect the mechanism by
which intronic mutations affect tau exon 10 splicing, we employed the
in vitro splicing assay using tau pre-mRNA substrates containing exon
10 and exon 11 with the shortened intron in between. Because the effect
of the DDPAC+14 mutation was consistently stronger than that of the
AusI+16 mutation in enhancing exon 10 splicing both in vitro and in
transfected cells, we used the DDPAC+14 mutant for further characterization.
We first carried out titration experiments to examine whether certain
splicing factors were limiting for tau exon 10 splicing.
Serial
dilution of the HeLa nuclear extract led to a general reduction
in
splicing efficiency for both wild-type and DDPAC+14 mutant
tau
pre-mRNAs (Fig.
6A). However, at medium
to low concentrations
of HeLa nuclear extracts, the difference in
splicing efficiency
between the DDPAC+14 and wild-type tau became even
more obvious
(Fig.
6A, compare lanes 2 with 5 and 3 with 6, respectively).
This suggested the involvement of
trans-acting factors in differential
recognition of
wild-type and mutant splicing substrates. We then
investigated which
spliceosomal U snRNPs were involved in differentially
recognizing
wild-type versus mutant tau pre-mRNAs. U1, U2, U5,
or U6 snRNPs were
partially blocked by using specific individual
2'-
O-methyl-oligoribonucleotides at appropriate
concentrations
to treat HeLa nuclear extracts prior to the splicing
reactions
(
55). In the mock-treated or control (U7)
oligoribonucleotide-treated
nuclear extracts, splicing of either
wild-type or DDPAC mutant
tau pre-mRNAs was the same as that in the
untreated nuclear extract,
with an approximately twofold increase in
the splicing products
in the reactions with DDPAC tau compared with
wild-type tau constructs
(Fig.
6B, lanes 1 and 2 and lanes 11 and 12).
When either U2 snRNP
or U5 snRNP was partially blocked, both wild-type
tau splicing
and DDPAC+14 tau splicing were partially inhibited to a
similar
extent. The ratio of DDPAC+14 splicing products to wild-type
tau
splicing products remained approximately the same (Fig.
6B, lanes
5 and 6 and lanes 7 and 8). With U6 snRNP partially blocked, splicing
of
wild-type tau was more severely affected than that of DDPAC+14
tau
(Fig.
6B, lanes 9 and 10). However, when U1 snRNP was partially
blocked, splicing of wild-type tau was drastically decreased,
whereas
DDPAC+14 tau splicing was only slightly affected. Thus,
the ratio of
DDPAC+14 splicing products to wild-type tau splicing
products was
increased from 2-fold in mock-treated nuclear extract
to approximately
10-fold when U1 snRNP was partially blocked.
This is consistent with
the idea that the secondary structure
on the wild-type tau pre-mRNA
renders the 5' splice site of exon
10 less accessible for recognition
by U1 snRNP at the early stage
and by other factors, such as U6, at a
later stage during spliceosome
assembly.

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FIG. 6.
(A) Presence of a limiting factor(s) for tau splicing in
HeLa nuclear extracts. Splicing reactions were set up as previously
described except that decreasing amounts of HeLa nuclear extract (NE)
were used, specifically: lanes 1 and 5, 6 µg/µl; lanes 2 and 6, 4 µg/µl; lanes 3 and 7, 2 µg/µl; and lanes 4 and 8, 0.8 µg/µl. Positions of pre-mRNA, splicing intermediates, and products
are indicated. (B) U snRNP inactivation differentially affects
wild-type (WT) and mutant tau splicing.
2'-O-Methyl-oligoribonucleotides (2'O-MeU) complementary to
U1, U2, U5, U6, and U7 snRNAs were added individually to HeLa nuclear
extracts, and the splicing reaction mixtures were preincubated at
30°C for 10 min. The concentration of individual
2'-O-methyl-oligonucleotides was titrated to give partial
inhibition of splicing (U1, 8 µM; U2, 0.3 µM; U5, 12 µM; and U6,
13 µM). The U7 2'-O-methyl-oligonucleotide (6 µM), which
has been shown not to affect splicing, was used as a control.
TauEx10+11d5wt and the DDPAC+14 mutant pre-mRNAs (WT and DD,
respectively) were then added, and the incubation was continued for
2 h. Splicing reaction products were analyzed by gel
electrophoresis.
|
|
To further demonstrate that the involvement of U1 snRNP in
differentially recognizing wild-type and DDPAC+14 tau substrates
was an
early event, we made use of HeLa nuclear extracts that
would not
proceed to the second step of splicing without the addition
of
exogenous creatine kinase (see Materials and Methods). In the
presence
of 8 µM 2'-
O-methyl U1 oligonucleotide and creatine
kinase,
wild-type tau splicing was remarkably reduced but DDPAC+14 tau
splicing was only slightly decreased (Fig.
7A, lanes 1 to 4).
When exogenous
creatine kinase was omitted from the splicing reaction
and the splicing
reaction was blocked at the first step, wild-type
tau splicing was
almost completely blocked in the presence of
3 to 16 µM
2'-
O-methyl U1 oligonucleotide (Fig.
7A, lanes 7 and
8).
However, under the same conditions, DDPAC tau splicing was
hardly
affected (Fig.
7A, compare lanes 10 to 12 with lanes 6
to 8). This
observation clearly indicates that U1 snRNP is crucial
for wild-type
tau splicing, especially during the earliest step
of the splicing
reaction, and that the DDPAC+14 intronic mutation
allows tau splicing
to occur even when functional U1 snRNP is
at a very low level. To rule
out the possibility of artifacts
related to the use of
2'-
O-methyl-oligonucleotides, we depleted
the extract of U1
snRNAs by using a DNA oligonucleotide and RNase
H (Fig.
7B and C).
Under these conditions, more than 90% of U1
snRNA in the nuclear
extract was cleaved (Fig.
7C, lane 2). When
splicing reactions were
carried out using this U1-inactivated
nuclear extract, wild-type tau
splicing was completely blocked
(Fig.
7B, lane 2), whereas significant
amounts of splicing intermediates
were still detected in the reactions
with DDPAC+14 tau pre-mRNA
(Fig.
7B, lane 4). This demonstrates that a
low level of U1 snRNP
(less than 10% of that in the untreated nuclear
extract) was sufficient
to support splicing of DDPAC+14 but not
wild-type tau pre-mRNA.
This result also suggests that the DDPAC+14
mutation may affect
tau splicing through increasing initial recognition
of the 5'
splice site of exon 10 by U1 snRNP.

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FIG. 7.
Wild-type (WT) tau pre-mRNA is more sensitive to U1
snRNP inactivation than DDPAC mutant pre-mRNA. (A) Effect of U1 snRNP
2'-O-methyl-oligonucleotide inactivation on TauEx10+11d5
splicing. The same experiment was done using a different preparation of
HeLa nuclear extract in the presence (lanes 1 to 4) and absence (lanes
5 to 12) of creatine kinase. This extract specifically needs the
addition of creatine kinase to proceed through the second step of the
splicing reaction. Incubation was for 1.5 h at 30°C. Addition of
the 2'-O-methyl U1 (2'O-MeU1) oligonucleotide is shown above
each lane. The concentration used was 8 µM for lanes 2 and 4 and 0, 4, 8, or 16 µM for lanes 5 and 9, 6 and 10, 7 and 11, and 8 and 12, respectively. (B) Inactivation of U1 snRNA by RNase H cleavage affects
wild-type (WT) and DDPAC tau splicing. Splicing reactions with tau
transcripts were performed with either mock-treated HeLa nuclear
extract (lanes 1 and 3) or nuclear extract after treatment of
oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage of U1 snRNA (lanes 2 and 4).
Splicing reactions were incubated at 30°C for 1.5 h. An asterisk
marks the RNA species produced by a cleavage induced by nonspecific
hybridization of the U1-specific oligonucleotide to the tau pre-mRNA
transcripts. (C) Efficiency of oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H
cleavage of U1 snRNA. An aliquot of mock-treated (lane 1) or U1
snRNA-depleted (lane 2) nuclear extracts as described for panel B was
analyzed by gel electrophoresis for the presence of different snRNA
species (as indicated on the right). U1*, U1 snRNA molecules
containing a shortened 5' end after RNase H cleavage. Under these
conditions, more than 90% of U1 snRNA in the nuclear extract was
cleaved.
|
|
DDPAC+14 intronic mutation promotes more efficient assembly of
U1-dependent complexes on the 5' splice site of exon 10.
To
examine whether the DDPAC+14 intronic mutation could influence the
formation of U1 snRNP-dependent early complexes on the 5' splice site,
a specific RNase H protection assay (Fig.
8) was performed as described before
(11). Wild-type or DDPAC+14 tau splicing substrates were
first incubated with HeLa nuclear extract under splicing conditions for
0 to 20 min. Then, 20 pmol (in molar excess to tau pre-mRNA
transcripts) of the oligodeoxynucleotide complementary to the 5' splice
site and corresponding to the U1 snRNP binding region was added
together with RNase H, and the incubation was continued for another 15 min. The RNase H-cleaved and -protected fragments were then resolved by
denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and quantified. An
increasing level of protection was observed for both substrates upon
incubation at 30°C (Fig. 8A, lanes 2 to 4 and 6 to 8), which likely
reflects early 5' splice site recognition by the spliceosomal
commitment complexes. This is consistent with the previous observation
with other pre-mRNAs that U1 snRNP binding to the 5' splice site is
detectable at 0°C but requires incubation with nuclear extract at
30°C to be stabilized (11). The DDPAC+14 tau mutant
transcript reproducibly gave rise to twofold more protected product
than wild-type tau (Fig. 8A, lanes 2 to 4 and lanes 6 to 8, and Fig.
7B, 10- and 20-min time points). Finally, when the nuclear extract was
depleted of U1 snRNP by oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage, no
protected tau pre-mRNA was detectable in the reactions with either
wild-type or DDPAC+14 tau transcripts (Fig. 8A, lanes 1 and 5). The
requirement for preincubation with nuclear extract to observe formation
of the U1 snRNP protected band also suggests that certain
trans-acting factors in the nuclear extract may play a role
in making the 5' splice site accessible for U1 snRNP binding. These
results demonstrate that the DDPAC+14 intronic mutation enhances the
formation of U1 snRNP-dependent complexes on the 5' splice site of exon
10 in a dynamic fashion during splicing. Supporting this result, we
also observed greater accumulation of spliceosomal complexes A and B at
these same time points, as monitored by native gel electrophoresis
(data not shown).

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FIG. 8.
Disruption of the putative secondary structure by the
DDPAC+14 intronic mutation promotes the assembly of U1-dependent
complexes on the 5' splice site of exon 10. (A) TauEx10+11d5wt and
DDPAC+14 RNAs were incubated with nuclear extract at 0°C (lanes 2 and
6) or 30°C for 10 min (lanes 3 and 7) or 20 min (lanes 4 and 8) or
with U1 snRNP-depleted (U1 ) HeLa nuclear extracts for 20 min (lanes 1 and 5). Following incubation, the oligonucleotide
complementary to the 5' splice site of exon 10 (Fig. 1A) was added
along with RNase H (0.4 U), and the incubation was continued for
another 15 min at 37°C. The RNA cleavage products were then analyzed
by gel electrophoresis. Positions of the U1-protected pre-mRNA and
cleavage products are indicated on the right. The asterisk indicates
the position of an artifactual cleavage product generated by
hybridization of the U1 snRNA-specific oligonucleotide on the tau
pre-mRNAs. After a longer exposure, the U1 snRNP-protected band was
visible in lanes 2 and 6 but not detectable in the lanes 1 and 5. (B)
Histogram representation of the ratio of protected tau pre-mRNA to
digested products for wild-type (WT) and mutant substrates. Error bars
are derived from five independent experiments.
|
|
To test directly whether DDPAC+14 intronic mutation promotes U1 snRNP
binding, we used a gel mobility shift assay with purified
U1 snRNP as
described in Materials and Methods. As shown in Fig.
9, incubation of the purified U1 snRNP
preparation with
32P-labeled tau pre-mRNA transcripts led
to the formation of a complex
that migrated more slowly than the free
RNA, with significantly
more complex detected in the DDPAC+14 tau
reaction than in the
wild-type tau reaction.

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FIG. 9.
Tau DDPAC+14 intronic mutation increases U1 snRNP
binding to tau pre-mRNA. TauEx10+11d5wt (lanes 1 to 5) and -DDPAC+14
(lanes 6 to 10) RNAs were incubated with purified U1 snRNP, 0 µl for
lanes 1 and 6, 0.35 µl for lanes 2 and 7, 0.7 µl for lanes 3 and 8, and 1.4 µl for lanes 4 and 9, or with depleted U1 snRNP
(U1 ) (lanes 5 and 10, 1.4 µl of protein used). The
RNA-U1 snRNP complexes were resolved in a nondenaturing 4%
polyacrylamide gel. In lanes 5 and 10, the U1 snRNP preparation was
treated with oligonucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage as described
above to inactivate U1 snRNA.
|
|
The difference in the amount of complex formed with the DDPAC+14 and
wild-type tau pre-mRNAs is more obvious at the lower
concentration of
U1 snRNP used (Fig.
9, compare lanes 7 and 8
with lanes 2 and 3).
Quantification with the PhosphorImager revealed
that there is an
approximately a seven- to ninefold increase in
the level of the complex
detected with the DDPAC+14 mutant compared
with the wild-type tau
transcript. The detected complex was U1
snRNP dependent, because
inactivation of U1 snRNP in the preparation
with RNase H in the
presence of the U1-specific oligonucleotide
abolished the formation of
this complex (Fig.
9, lanes 5 and 10).
These results demonstrate that
the DDPAC+14 intronic mutation
enhances the formation of U1
snRNP-dependent complexes on the
5' splice site of exon
10.
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have established a minigene system to dissect the molecular
mechanism underlying alternative splicing of human tau pre-mRNA exon
10, an event important for pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorder
FTDP-17. Our systematic biochemical analyses of wild-type and intronic
mutant tau pre-mRNAs demonstrated that single-nucleotide mutations in
an evolutionarily nonconserved intronic region enhance splicing between
exon 10 and exon 11. Experiments using RNase H and an oligonucleotide
complementary to positions
6 to +12 at the splice junction suggest
that the intronic mutant tau transcripts harbor a more "open" RNA
structure in this region than wild-type tau in the presence or absence
of HeLa nuclear extracts. This is consistent with the presence of an
RNA stem-loop structure forming around the exon 10 5' splice site in
wild-type tau pre-mRNA. Comparison of the splicing efficiency of
wild-type and mutant tau transcripts when various spliceosomal U snRNPs
were made limiting by specific 2'-O-methyl oligonucleotides
demonstrated that wild-type tau splicing was most sensitive to a
reduction in the level of functional U1 snRNP. Finally, the U1 snRNP
protection assay and the gel mobility shift experiment with purified U1
snRNP revealed an increase in the binding of U1 snRNP to the 5' splice
site of exon 10 in the DDPAC+14 mutant, correlating well with the
increase in splicing efficiency observed in our in vitro splicing
assay. These results strongly support the model depicted in Fig.
10B, where the stem-loop structure in
the wild-type tau pre-mRNA is destabilized by FTDP-17 intronic
mutations, leading to enhanced recognition of this 5' splice site by
the U1 snRNP-containing early splicing complex and increased formation
of Tau4R transcripts.

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FIG. 10.
Model explaining enhanced splicing of exon 10 in
DDPAC+14 and AusI+16 intronic tau mutations via increased U1 snRNA
interaction. In the wild-type tau, a putative stem-loop structure forms
around the 5' splice site of exon 10, as depicted in panel A. The
base-pairing interaction between U1 snRNA and the 5' splice site is
shown in panel B. The stem-loop structure prevents efficient
interaction of U1 snRNA with the 5' splice site and leads to partial
skipping of exon 10. Such a stem-loop structure is less stable in the
presence of the DDPAC+14 and AusI+16 mutations (or other likely
mutations, including those at positions 2, +3, and +13) because of
reduced base-pairing interactions, resulting in increased recognition
by U1 snRNP and therefore increased exon 10 splicing. The Watson-Crick
base-pairing interactions are depicted as thick black bars. The G-to-A
mutations at the +3 (MSTD) and 2 (S305N) positions not only disrupt
the base-pairing interactions in the stem (A) but also lead to the
formation of additional base-pairing interactions between the tau
pre-mRNA and U1 snRNA ( ). Thus, it is possible that such
mutations at +3 or 2 positions have a more severe effect on exon 10 splicing.
|
|
This stem-loop structure model could also explain the behavior of
several other mutations found in a number of patients with tau exon 10 aberrant splicing, including +3 and +13 mutations (6, 23, 30,
63) in addition to the DDPAC+14 and AusI+16 mutations (Fig. 10A).
It is also consistent with the observation that in the rat (or mouse),
the predominant isoform of tau is the exon 10-containing isoform. Exon
10 splicing may be enhanced in these species because of the
destabilization of the stem structure caused by the naturally occurring
G at position +13 in the rat tau gene (G at both +13 and +16 positions
in mouse; see Fig. 2); (23; Jiang and Wu,
unpublished data). Thus, a single-nucleotide change in this
nonconserved intronic region can have a significant impact on
alternative splicing of exon 10.
While this paper was in preparation, two studies were published in
which tau exon 10 alternative splicing was examined more extensively
using exon-trapping assays (9, 23). The study by Grover and
colleagues lends further support for the stem-loop model. On the other
hand, D'Souza and colleagues suggested that the stem-loop structure
was not supported by a mutation at +12 that should restore base-pairing
in the stem structure (9). However, results from
compensatory-mutation analyses have to be carefully interpreted. First,
A-U base pairing (in the +12 compensatory mutant) is expected to be
weaker than G-C base-pairing (in the wild-type tau). Second, multiple
RNA-RNA and RNA-protein interactions are known to influence splice site
selection and splicing efficiency. The stem-loop structure has to be
viewed in the context of these multiple interactions. It is likely that
events other than the U1 snRNA-pre-mRNA interaction also play important
roles in regulating tau exon 10 splicing. In fact, we have found that
certain non-U1 snRNP splicing regulators affect tau exon 10 splicing,
and we are currently characterizing the differential recognition of the wild-type versus intronic mutant pre-mRNAs by these splicing
regulators (Jiang and Wu, unpublished). The single-nucleotide changes
around the 5' splice site may have multiple effects on the RNA-RNA
interactions (intramolecular and intermolecular) as well as on
RNA-protein interactions. These effects may not be necessarily in the
same direction. For example, "compensatory mutations" for the
DDPAC+14 and AusI+16 mutants (at positions +1 and
2, respectively)
that "restore" the base-pairing interactions in the stem will also affect U1 snRNP binding at the same time. Therefore, the compensatory mutation strategy that we and other groups used may not be optimal for
testing the stem-loop model in the presence of the spliceosome.
The role of U1 snRNP in mammalian pre-mRNA splicing has been well
established (for reviews, see references 2, 36, 46, and 52). It has been demonstrated that differential
binding of U1 snRNP could affect 5' splice site recognition in both
yeast and mammalian cells (10, 20-22, 39, 49, 57, 58, 66). It is worth noting that these previous studies have all focused on
either the upstream exonic region or the intronic region at the U1
snRNP binding site less than 10 nucleotides from the splice junction.
Sequences further downstream in the intron have been found to be less
conserved (47, 56). Our results demonstrate that a
nonconserved intronic region outside the U1 snRNP binding site can also
influence U1 snRNP binding via formation of a secondary structure(s)
that masks the U1 snRNP binding site. The formation of secondary
structures that potentially sequester 5' splice sites has been proposed
as a mechanism to regulate alternative 5' splice site selection
(12, 13, 59, 60). However, there has been little direct
biochemical evidence demonstrating differential U1 snRNP binding in the
pre-mRNA with proposed secondary structures (4, 58). In
yeast cells, a systematic analysis to examine the effects of secondary
structures on U1 snRNP binding using artificial hairpins to sequester
the 5' splice site of the yeast RP51A intron has been carried out
(22). Pre-mRNAs containing hairpin structures with longer
than 9 consecutive base pairs began to show a reduction in splicing in
vivo, whereas structures with up to 6 consecutive base pairs had little
effect on splicing efficiency (22). Our study demonstrates
that even a single-nucleotide change at position +14 or +16, which
potentially disrupts one base-pairing in a 6-bp stem involving the 5'
splice site, leads to a significant increase in splicing of tau exon 10 both in vitro and in vivo. In addition, these mutations are located in
a nonconserved region of the intron. This is significant and prompts
revised strategies for identifying potentially important genes for
human diseases, since many have focused only on evolutionarily
conserved regions.
It should be pointed out that this secondary-structure model is not
inconsistent with the potential involvement of factors other than U1
snRNP. It is possible that the intronic mutations also disrupt the
interaction of certain splicing-repressing factors (either protein or
RNA). The potential involvement of splicing factors other than U1 snRNP
in differentiating wild-type and intronic mutant tau pre-mRNAs was
suggested by several observations. In human brain tissues and in cells
transfected with tau minigenes, the increase in exon 10 splicing in
both AusI+16 and DDPAC+14 mutant tau pre-mRNAs, compared with wild-type
tau, appeared more dramatic than the difference observed in the RNase H
cleavage assay in the absence of nuclear extract. In this study (Fig.
2) and in a previous study (30), the ratio of Tau4R to Tau3R
was increased from 1 in wild-type tau to 3 or higher in AusI+16 tau and
4 or higher in DDPAC+14 tau. SR proteins have been shown to bind
directly to 5' splice sites (69) and recruit and/or
stabilize the binding of the U1 snRNP to pre-mRNA (11, 34).
In our previous studies, we have demonstrated interaction between SR
proteins and U1 70K, a U1 snRNP protein (67), and distinct
functional activities of SR proteins in alternative 5' splice site
selection (68) as well as in alternative exon inclusion
(33). Recently, a yeast U1 snRNP protein, Nam8p, was shown
to interact with nonconserved intronic sequences and affect 5' splice
site selection (51). U5 PRP8 yeast and human homologs have
been shown to interact with 5' and 3' splice sites (53, 54,
64), although their role in regulating alternative splicing is
not yet clear. It is possible that some of these proteins, or other
novel or known alternative splicing regulators, also play a role in tau
alternative splicing.
Abnormal pre-mRNA splicing has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a
large number of human diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders
such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (42). Almost all
splicing mutations reported in human diseases either weaken recognition
by spliceosomal snRNPs or cause activation of cryptic splice sites,
leading to exon skipping, intron retention, or usage of cryptic splice
sites (28, 48). The FTDP-17-associated intronic mutations
analyzed in this study represent the first case in which single-nucleotide mutations cause increased rather than decreased splicing of an alternatively spliced exon, thereby altering the balance
between different isoforms of normal gene products and leading to
neurodegeneration. Our study provides strong evidence that enhanced U1
snRNP binding to a normal alternative splice site, as a result of
single-nucleotide mutations in the nonconserved intronic region outside
of the U1 snRNP binding site, can be a pathogenic mechanism. Such
aberrant splicing can cause alteration in the delicate balance of
different alternative splicing products. Considering the size of
introns compared with exons and the complexity of alternative splicing
regulation in mammalian genes, it is likely that simple alterations in
the balance of different isoforms of critical genes as a result of
aberrant splicing could be a more important mechanism for pathogenesis
of human diseases than previously appreciated.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank A. Kramer, W.-Y. Tarn, and M. McNally for generous gifts
of purified U1 snRNP preparation and
2'-O-methyl-oligonucleotides and Y. Rao, A. Strauss, and
members of the Wu laboratory for critical reading of the manuscript.
This work is supported by grants from the National Institute of Health
(RO1 GM53945/AG17518 to J.Y.W. and P50 AG05681 to A.M.G.), by the
Leukemia Society of America Scholarship to J.Y.W., by a postdoctoral
fellowship from Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of
Canada to J.C., by NSADA to J.M.K., and by an NIH career development
award to A.M.G. (AG000634).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Molecular Biology and Pharmacology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110. Phone: (314) 454-2081. Fax: (314)
454-2388. E-mail: jwu{at}molecool.wustl.edu.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, June 2000, p. 4036-4048, Vol. 20, No. 11
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