Abstract

The Drosophila polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (dmPTB or hephaestus) plays an important role during spermatogenesis. The heph2 mutation in this gene results in a specific defect in spermatogenesis, causing aberrant spermatid individualization and male sterility. However, the array of molecular defects in the mutant remains uncharacterized. Using an unbiased high throughput sequencing approach, we have identified transcripts that are misregulated in this mutant. Aberrant transcripts show altered expression levels, exon skipping, and alternative 5’ ends. We independently verified these findings by reverse-transcription and polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis. Our analysis shows misregulation of transcripts that have been connected to spermatogenesis, including components of the actomyosin cytoskeletal apparatus. We show, for example, that the Myosin light chain 1 (Mlc1) transcript is aberrantly spliced. Furthermore, bioinformatics analysis reveals that Mlc1 contains a high affinity binding site(s) for dmPTB and that the site is conserved in many Drosophila species. We discuss that Mlc1 and other components of the actomyosin cytoskeletal apparatus offer important molecular links between the loss of dmPTB function and the observed developmental defect in spermatogenesis. This study provides the first comprehensive list of genes misregulated in vivo in the heph2 mutant in Drosophila and offers insight into the role of dmPTB during spermatogenesis.

Highlights

  • Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins are ubiquitously expressed and associate with primary transcripts

  • We used high throughput sequencing to identify transcripts that are misregulated in heph2 mutant flies

  • We obtained 57,738,593 sequence reads for the wildtype control and 44,791,181 sequence reads for the heph2 mutant

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Summary

Introduction

Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) are ubiquitously expressed and associate with primary transcripts. One of these RNA-binding proteins, the polypyrimidine-tract-binding protein (PTB), which is referred to as hnRNP I, binds to polypyrimidine tracts. These binding sites contain UCUU and UUCU sequence motifs [1,2,3,4,5]. Genes Misregulated in the heph Mutant localization (reviewed in [6,7,8,9]). Of the three human PTB genes (PTBP1, PTBP2, and PTBP3), PTBP1 is more widely expressed, and PTBP2 and PTBP3 show expression restricted to specific tissues [10]

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