Abstract

The Drosophila polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (dmPTB or hephaestus) plays an important role during embryogenesis. A loss of function mutation, heph03429, results in varied defects in embryonic developmental processes, leading to embryonic lethality. However, the suite of molecular functions that are disrupted in the mutant remains unknown. We have used an unbiased high throughput sequencing approach to identify transcripts that are misregulated in this mutant. Misregulated transcripts show evidence of significantly altered patterns of splicing (exon skipping, 5′ and 3′ splice site switching), alternative 5′ ends, and mRNA level changes (up and down regulation). These findings are independently supported by reverse-transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis and in situ hybridization. We show that a group of genes, such as Zerknüllt, z600 and screw are among the most upregulated in the mutant and have been functionally linked to dorso-ventral patterning and/or dorsal closure processes. Thus, loss of dmPTB function results in specific misregulated transcripts, including those that provide the missing link between the loss of dmPTB function and observed developmental defects in embryogenesis. This study provides the first comprehensive repertoire of genes affected in vivo in the heph mutant in Drosophila and offers insight into the role of dmPTB during embryonic development.

Highlights

  • RNA-binding proteins regulate many aspects of post-transcriptional gene expression

  • Differences in poly(A) site usage were not analyzed. These findings show that the loss of dmPTB function in the heph03429 mutant resulted in significant differences in mRNA isoforms for specific transcripts

  • We identify specific transcripts that are misregulated in the mutant, resulting from differences in either mRNA isoforms or mRNA levels

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Summary

Introduction

The heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) are ubiquitously expressed, associate with nascent transcripts, and play various roles in basic RNA metabolism [1,2]. One such protein, the polypyrimidine-tractbinding protein (PTB or hnRNP I), binds to pyrimidine-rich sequences containing motifs such as UCUU and UUCU [3,4,5,6,7]. The polypyrimidine-tractbinding protein (PTB or hnRNP I), binds to pyrimidine-rich sequences containing motifs such as UCUU and UUCU [3,4,5,6,7] It affects mRNA splicing, polyadenylation, translation, mRNA stability/degradation, and mRNA localization (reviewed in [2,8,9,10]). About the role or the downstream targets of dmPTB in these various developmental processes in Drosophila

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