Abstract

BackgroundTMEM16A (Anoctamin 1; ANO1) is an eight transmembrane protein that functions as a calcium-activated chloride channel. TMEM16A in human exhibits alternatively spliced exons (6b, 13 and 15), which confer important roles in the regulation of channel function. Mouse Tmem16a is reported to consist of 25 exons that code for a 956 amino acid protein. In this study our aim was to provide details of mouse Tmem16a genomic structure and to investigate if Tmem16a transcript undergoes alternative splicing to generate channel diversity.ResultsWe identified Tmem16a transcript variants consisting of alternative exons 6b, 10, 13, 14, 15 and 18. Our findings indicate that many of these exons are expressed in various combinations and that these splicing events are mostly conserved between mouse and human. In addition, we confirmed the expression of these exon variants in other mouse tissues. Additional splicing events were identified including a novel conserved exon 13b, tandem splice sites of exon 1 and 21 and two intron retention events.ConclusionOur results suggest that Tmem16a gene is significantly more complex than previously described. The complexity is especially evident in the region spanning exons 6 through 16 where a number of the alternative splicing events are thought to affect calcium sensitivity, voltage dependence and the kinetics of activation and deactivation of this calcium-activated chloride channel. The identification of multiple Tmem16a splice variants suggests that alternative splicing is an exquisite mechanism that operates to diversify TMEM16A channel function in both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.

Highlights

  • TMEM16A (Anoctamin 1; ANO1) is an eight transmembrane protein that functions as a calciumactivated chloride channel

  • Calcium-activated chloride currents have been recorded in cardiac muscle cells from various species including mouse [9], and play an important role in the cardiac action potential [10,11,12]

  • Tmem16a genomic structure is highly conserved in mouse and human

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Summary

Introduction

TMEM16A (Anoctamin 1; ANO1) is an eight transmembrane protein that functions as a calciumactivated chloride channel. TMEM16A in human exhibits alternatively spliced exons (6b, 13 and 15), which confer important roles in the regulation of channel function. Alternative splicing affects cardiac function by regulating proteins involved in cellular excitation, including ion channels [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Calcium-activated chloride currents have been recorded in cardiac muscle cells from various species including mouse [9], and play an important role in the cardiac action potential [10,11,12]. In 2008, three independent groups identified Tmem16a as a strong candidate gene to encode (or at least a major component of) a calcium-activated chloride channel [13,14,15].

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