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Published October 19, 2009 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Large introns in relation to alternative splicing and gene evolution: a case study of Drosophila bruno-3

Abstract

Background: Alternative splicing (AS) of maturing mRNA can generate structurally and functionally distinct transcripts from the same gene. Recent bioinformatic analyses of available genome databases inferred a positive correlation between intron length and AS. To study the interplay between intron length and AS empirically and in more detail, we analyzed the diversity of alternatively spliced transcripts (ASTs) in the Drosophila RNA-binding Bruno-3 (Bru-3) gene. This gene was known to encode thirteen exons separated by introns of diverse sizes, ranging from 71 to 41,973 nucleotides in D. melanogaster. Although Bru-3's structure is expected to be conducive to AS, only two ASTs of this gene were previously described. Results: Cloning of RT-PCR products of the entire ORF from four species representing three diverged Drosophila lineages provided an evolutionary perspective, high sensitivity, and long-range contiguity of splice choices currently unattainable by high-throughput methods. Consequently, we identified three new exons, a new exon fragment and thirty-three previously unknown ASTs of Bru-3. All exon-skipping events in the gene were mapped to the exons surrounded by introns of at least 800 nucleotides, whereas exons split by introns of less than 250 nucleotides were always spliced contiguously in mRNA. Cases of exon loss and creation during Bru-3 evolution in Drosophila were also localized within large introns. Notably, we identified a true de novo exon gain: exon 8 was created along the lineage of the obscura group from intronic sequence between cryptic splice sites conserved among all Drosophila species surveyed. Exon 8 was included in mature mRNA by the species representing all the major branches of the obscura group. To our knowledge, the origin of exon 8 is the first documented case of exonization of intronic sequence outside vertebrates. Conclusion: We found that large introns can promote AS via exon-skipping and exon turnover during evolution likely due to frequent errors in their removal from maturing mRNA. Large introns could be a reservoir of genetic diversity, because they have a greater number of mutable sites than short introns. Taken together, gene structure can constrain and/or promote gene evolution.

Additional Information

© Kandul and Noor; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2009. This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Received: 20 July 2009. Accepted: 19 October 2009. Published: 19 October 2009. We thank K. Dusinberre, our associate editor and two anonymous reviewers for comments on the manuscript and helpful discussion. D. pseudoobscura bogotana, D. melanogaster and D. mojavensis strains were contributed by A. Chang. N.P.K. was been supported in part by a postdoctoral fellowship in Evolutionary Genomics and Molecular Evolution from Duke University and the Duke Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy. M.A.F.N. is supported by NIH grant GM076051 and NSF grants 0509780 and 0715484. DNA sequences are deposited in GenBank [GenBank: GQ497346-GQ497445]. Authors' contributions: NPK conceived the study, performed the bench-work and analysis, and wrote the manuscript. MAFN supervised the analysis, wrote the script for intron analysis, and contributed to writing the manuscript. Both authors approved the final manuscript.

Attached Files

Published - Kandul2009p6287Bmc_Genet.pdf

Supplemental Material - 1471-2156-10-67-s1.xls

Supplemental Material - 1471-2156-10-67-s2.pdf

Supplemental Material - 1471-2156-10-67-s3.pdf

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Supplemental Material - 1471-2156-10-67-s7.pdf

Supplemental Material - 1471-2156-10-67-s8.pdf

Supplemental Material - 1471-2156-10-67-s9.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023