Abstract

RNA splicing is a key process in eukaryotic gene expression, in which an intron is spliced out of a pre-mRNA molecule to eventually produce a mature mRNA. Most intron-containing genes are constitutively spliced, hence efficient splicing of an intron is crucial for efficient regulation of gene expression. Here we use a large synthetic oligo library of ~20,000 variants to explore how different intronic sequence features affect splicing efficiency and mRNA expression levels in S. cerevisiae. Introns are defined by three functional sites, the 5' donor site, the branch site, and the 3' acceptor site. Using a combinatorial design of synthetic introns, we demonstrate how non-consensus splice site sequences in each of these sites affect splicing efficiency. We then show that S. cerevisiae splicing machinery tends to select alternative 3' splice sites downstream of the original site, and we suggest that this tendency created a selective pressure, leading to the avoidance of cryptic splice site motifs near introns' 3' ends. We further use natural intronic sequences from other yeast species, whose splicing machineries have diverged to various extents, to show how intron architectures in the various species have been adapted to the organism's splicing machinery. We suggest that the observed tendency for cryptic splicing is a result of a loss of a specific splicing factor, U2AF1. Lastly, we show that synthetic sequences containing two introns give rise to alternative RNA isoforms in S. cerevisiae, demonstrating that merely a synthetic fusion of two introns might be suffice to facilitate alternative splicing in yeast. Our study reveals novel mechanisms by which introns are shaped in evolution to allow cells to regulate their transcriptome. In addition, it provides a valuable resource to study the regulation of constitutive and alternative splicing in a model organism.

Highlights

  • RNA splicing has a major role in eukaryotic gene expression

  • RNA splicing is a process in which parts of a new pre-mRNA are spliced out of the mRNA molecule to produce eventually a mature mRNA

  • Those RNA segments that are spliced out are termed introns, and they are found in most genes in eukaryotic organisms. Regulation of this process has a major role in the control of gene expression

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Summary

Introduction

RNA splicing has a major role in eukaryotic gene expression. Introns are removed from a pre-RNA molecule towards creation of a mature and functional mRNA. Most introns are constitutively spliced [6,7] and their contribution to gene expression is not through increasing proteome diversity. Because a pre-mRNA must undergo splicing to produce a functional mRNA, the efficiency of this process directly affects the efficiency of the overall gene expression process. Regulation of constitutive splicing can be a mechanism to regulate gene expression [8] and a target for evolution to act on [9]

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