Abstract
The initial step in pre-mRNA splicing involves formation of a spliceosome commitment complex (CC) or E-complex by factors that serve to bind and mark the exon-intron boundaries that will undergo splicing. The CC component U1 snRNP assembles at the 5'-splice site (ss), whereas SF1, U2AF2, and U2AF1 define the 3'-ss of the intron. A PRP40 protein bridges U1 snRNP with factors at the 3'-ss. To determine how defects in CC components impact cancers, we analyzed human gastrointestinal (GI) cancer patient tissue and clinical data from cBioPortal. cBioPortal datasets were analyzed for CC factor alterations and patient outcomes in GI cancers (bowel, stomach, esophagus, pancreas, and liver). In addition, co-expression datasets were used to determine the splicing targets of the CC. Our analysis found that frequency of genetic changes was low (1%-13%), but when combined with changes in expression levels, there was an overall surprisingly high incidence of CC component (>30%) alterations in GI cancers. Colon cancer patients carrying BRAF driver gene mutations had high incidences of CC alterations (19%-61%), whereas patients with APC, KRAS, or TP53 gene mutations had low (<5%) incidences of CC alterations. Most significantly, patients with mutations in CC genes exhibited a consistent trend of favorable survival rates, indicating that mutations that impair or lower CC component expression favor patient survival. Conversely, patients with high CC expression had worse survival. Pathway analysis indicates that the CC regulates specific metabolic and tumor suppressor pathways. Metabolic pathways involved in cell survival, nutrition, biosynthesis, autophagy, cellular movement (invasion), or immune surveillance pathways correlated with CC factor upregulation, whereas tumor suppressor pathways, which regulate cell proliferation and apoptosis, were inversely correlated with CC factor upregulation. This study demonstrates the versatility of in silico analysis to determine molecular function of large macromolecular complexes such as the spliceosome CC. Furthermore, our analysis indicates that therapeutic lowering of CC levels in colon cancer patients may enhance patient survival.
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