Abstract

BackgroundADAM15 is a metalloprotease-disintegrin implicated in ectodomain shedding and cell adhesion. Aberrant ADAM15 expression has been associated with human cancer and other disorders. We have previously shown that the alternative splicing of ADAM15 transcripts is mis-regulated in cancer cells. To gain a better understanding of ADAM15 regulation, its genomic organization and regulatory elements as well as the alternative exon use in human tissues were characterized.ResultsHuman ADAM15, flanked by the FLJ32785/DCST1 and ephrin-A4 genes, spans 11.4 kb from the translation initiation codon to the polyadenylation signal, being the shortest multiple-exon ADAM gene. The gene contains 23 exons varying from 63 to 316 bp and 22 introns from 79 to 1283 bp. The gene appeared to have several transcription start sites and their location suggested the promoter location within a CpG island proximal to the translation start. Reporter expression experiments confirmed the location of functional GC-rich, TATAless and CAATless promoter, with the most critical transcription-supporting elements located -266 to -23 bp relative to the translation start. Normal human tissues showed different complex patterns of at least 13 different ADAM15 splice variants arising from the alternative use of the cytosolic-encoding exons 19, 20a/b, and 21a/b. The deduced ADAM15 protein isoforms have different combinations of cytosolic regulatory protein interaction motifs.ConclusionCharacterization of human ADAM15 gene and identification of elements involved in the regulation of transcription and alternative splicing provide important clues for elucidation of physiological and pathological roles of ADAM15. The present results also show that the alternative exon use is a physiological post-transcriptional mechanism regulating ADAM15 expression in human tissues.

Highlights

  • ADAM15 is a metalloprotease-disintegrin implicated in ectodomain shedding and cell adhesion

  • (page number not for citation purposes) http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2199/8/90 the present results demonstrate that normal human tissues display different complex patterns of at least 13 ADAM15 variants

  • Differential alternative ADAM15 splicing was demonstrated in normal human tissues, indicating that alternative exon use is a physiological post-transcriptional mechanism regulating ADAM15 expression

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Summary

Introduction

ADAM15 is a metalloprotease-disintegrin implicated in ectodomain shedding and cell adhesion. ADAM15 is a widely expressed member of the ADAM (adisintegrin and metalloprotease) gene family encoding transmembrane metalloproteinase-disintegrins [1]. ADAMs have been implicated in numerous physiological and pathological processes through their proteolytic or adhesive activities, including ectodomain shedding and cell-cell interactions [2,3,4,5]. ADAM15 has been implicated in activation of growth factors through ectodomain shedding and in cell-cell interactions, but specific physiological roles are not known. Strongly decreased angiogenesis in the retinopathy of prematurity model in adam15-/mice indicated a critical role in pathological neovascularization [6], corroborated by the studies implicating ADAM15 in regulation of vasculogenesis [8,9,10,11]

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