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== Splicing Activity ==
== Splicing Activity ==
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The splicing mechanism for SRp20 follows the normal eukaryotic mechanism, in which five different small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) bring the splice sites together in order to start the reaction (refer to mechanism figure). Specifically, SRp20 and other SR proteins interact with the RNA ligand at the exonic splicing enhancer sequence at the beginning of the 3’ splice site adjacent to the intron being removed. SRp20 facilitates the interaction of the U2 snRNP with the RNA to continue the mechanism (refer to the mechanism figure including the snRNPs).
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The splicing mechanism for SRp20 follows the normal eukaryotic mechanism, in which five different small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) bring the splice sites together in order to start the reaction (refer to mechanism figure). Specifically, SRp20 and other SR proteins interact with the RNA ligand at the exonic splicing enhancer sequence at the beginning of the 3’ splice site adjacent to the intron being removed. SRp20 facilitates the interaction of the U2 snRNP with the RNA to continue the mechanism (refer to the mechanism figure including the snRNPs). [[Image:mechanism1.png|300px|right|thumb|'''Figure 1.''' Splicing mechanism for eukaryotes. Free 3’OH nucleophile of adenosine in intron attacks phosphorus of phosphate creating a ring structure intron known as a lariat. The free 2’OH in the 5’ splice site (red) acts as the nucleophile to attack the phosphate of the first nucleotide in the 3’ splice site (red) to release the lariat intron. The products include the final modified RNA sequence and the lariat which will be recycled.jpg]]

Revision as of 17:21, 2 April 2018

Contents

Introduction

Overview

The SRp20 protein is an alternative splicing factor found in homo sapiens as well as many other eukaryotes. It is a relatively small protein with a length of 164 amino acids and a weight of about 19kDa. In fact, it is the smallest member of the SR protein family. The protein contains two domains: a serine-arginine rich (SR) domain and a RNA-recognition domain (RRM).

History

Splicing is one step in the process of RNA maturation that cuts out introns and joins exons together. Both the spliceosome, a complex of snRNAs (U1, U2, etc.), and splicing factors like SRp20 interact with intron consensus sequences in the pre-mRNA to regulate this process. Alternative splicing allows one mRNA molecule to produce numerous proteins that perform different functions in a cell by inclusion and exclusion of RNA sequences. There are two main families of splicing factors: Serine-Arginine rich (SR) proteins and heterogeneous nuclear RiboNucleoProteins (hnRNPs). The SRp20 protein belongs to the SR protein family. All SR proteins are defined by a RNA-binding domain at the N-terminus and a serine-arginine rich domain at the C-terminus (Corbo et al. 2013). The discovery of this family started in the 1900s with the SF2 (SRp30a) protein and has since come to include twelve proteins, all of which act as splicing factors. SRp20 was first discovered in calf thymus when it was separated with several other SR proteins based on their molecular weight (Zhaler 1992). An identical protein, called X16, was discovered in an earlier paper studying different genes that change expression during B-cell development (Ayane 1991). At the time, the protein was assumed to play a role in RNA processing and cellular proliferation, a finding that was later proved to be true (Ayane 1991; Corbo et al. 2013). The SRp20 protein has been shown to play a role in cancer progression and neurological disorders, specifically through alternative splicing. For example, SRp20 has been shown to play a role in alternative splicing of the Tau protein, an integral protein in the progression of Alzheimer’s disease (Corbo 2013). SRp20 has even been found to serve as a splicing factor for its own mRNA, influencing the inclusion of exon 4 (Corbo 2013). Another function of SRp20 is its role in export of mRNA out of the nucleus, notably H2A histone mRNA export (Hargous 2006).

SRp20 bound to RNA ligand and IgG binding domain 1 (PDB entry 2i2y)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

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Neel Bhagat

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