|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Extensive alternative splicing transitions during postnatal skeletal muscle development are required for calcium handling functions.

First Author  Brinegar AE Year  2017
Journal  Elife Volume  6
PubMed ID  28826478 Mgi Jnum  J:256956
Mgi Id  MGI:6117002 Doi  10.7554/eLife.27192
Citation  Brinegar AE, et al. (2017) Extensive alternative splicing transitions during postnatal skeletal muscle development are required for calcium handling functions. Elife 6:e27192
abstractText  Postnatal development of skeletal muscle is a highly dynamic period of tissue remodeling. Here, we used RNA-seq to identify transcriptome changes from late embryonic to adult mouse muscle and demonstrate that alternative splicing developmental transitions impact muscle physiology. The first 2 weeks after birth are particularly dynamic for differential gene expression and alternative splicing transitions, and calcium-handling functions are significantly enriched among genes that undergo alternative splicing. We focused on the postnatal splicing transitions of the three calcineurin A genes, calcium-dependent phosphatases that regulate multiple aspects of muscle biology. Redirected splicing of calcineurin A to the fetal isoforms in adult muscle and in differentiated C2C12 slows the timing of muscle relaxation, promotes nuclear localization of calcineurin target Nfatc3, and/or affects expression of Nfatc transcription targets. The results demonstrate a previously unknown specificity of calcineurin isoforms as well as the broader impact of alternative splicing during muscle postnatal development.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

23 Bio Entities

55 Expression