How Genome 3D Organization Regulates Alternative Splicing?

Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIo0EPSs81M



Duration: 36:00
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Gil Ast (Tel Aviv University)
https://simons.berkeley.edu/talks/how-genome-3d-organization-regulates-alternative-splicing
From Algorithms to Discovery in Genome-Scale Biology and Medicine

How the splicing machinery defines exons or introns as the spliced unit has remained a puzzle for 30 years. Here, we demonstrate that peripheral and central regions of the nucleus harbor genes with two distinct exon-intron GC content architectures that differ in the splicing outcome. Genes with low GC content exons, flanked by long introns with lower GC content, are localized in the periphery, and the exons are defined as the spliced unit. Alternative splicing of these genes results in exon skipping. In contrast, the nuclear center contains genes with a high GC content in the exons and short flanking introns. Most splicing of these genes occurs via intron definition, and aberrant splicing leads to intron retention. We demonstrate that the nuclear periphery and center generate different environments for the regulation of alternative splicing and that two sets of splicing factors form discrete regulatory subnetworks for the two gene architectures. Our study connects 3D genome organization and splicing, thus demonstrating that exon and intron definition modes of splicing occur in different nuclear regions.




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Tags:
Simons Institute
theoretical computer science
UC Berkeley
Computer Science
Theory of Computation
Theory of Computing
From Algorithms to Discovery in Genome-Scale Biology and Medicine
Gil Ast