Abstract

In dosage compensation of female mammals, the accumulation of Xist RNA initiates silencing of one X-chromosome. Xist action is repressed by the antisense gene, Tsix, whose full-length RNA product is complementary to Xist RNA in mice. While previous work showed that Tsix transcription blocks the accumulation of Xist RNA, it is still unclear whether this repression requires the antisense RNA product or whether the antisense transcriptional movement is sufficient. A better understanding of potential mechanisms requires elucidation of Tsix RNA structure and determination of Tsix RNA copy number relative to that of Xist RNA. Previous work indicated that at least some of murine Tsix is spliced and that human TSIX truncates within the 3' end of XIST. Here, further characterization and quantitation of murine Tsix RNA reveal three new findings: first, in undifferentiated embryonic stem cells, Tsix RNA is present at 10-100-fold molar excess over Xist RNA. Second, only 30-60% of Tsix RNA is spliced at known exon-intron junctions. The nearly equal abundance of spliced and unspliced species leaves open possible roles for both isoforms. Finally, Tsix is spliced heterogeneously at the 5' end and most detectable splice variants exhibit only a 1.9 kb region of complementarity between sense and antisense RNAs. Implications for Tsix's possible mechanisms of action are discussed.

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