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Publication : Modular Splicing Is Linked to Evolution in the Synapse-Specificity Molecule Kirrel3.

First Author  Traenkner D Year  2023
Journal  eNeuro Volume  10
Issue  12 PubMed ID  37977826
Mgi Jnum  J:343585 Mgi Id  MGI:7564981
Doi  10.1523/ENEURO.0253-23.2023 Citation  Traenkner D, et al. (2023) Modular Splicing Is Linked to Evolution in the Synapse-Specificity Molecule Kirrel3. eNeuro 10(12):ENEURO.0253-23.2023
abstractText  Kirrel3 is a cell-adhesion molecule that instructs the formation of specific synapses during brain development in mouse and Kirrel3 variants may be risk factors for autism and intellectual disabilities in humans. Kirrel3 is predicted to undergo alternative splicing but brain isoforms have not been studied. Here, we present the first in-depth characterization of Kirrel3 isoform diversity in brain using targeted, long-read mRNA sequencing of mouse hippocampus. We identified 19 isoforms with predicted transmembrane and secreted forms and show that even rare isoforms generate detectable protein in the brain. We also analyzed publicly-available long-read mRNA databases from human brain tissue and found 11 Kirrel3 isoforms that, similar to mouse, encode transmembrane and secreted forms. In mice and humans, Kirrel3 diversity arises from alternative, independent use of protein-domain coding exons and alternative early translation-stop signals. Intriguingly, the alternatively spliced exons appear at branch points in the chordate phylogenetic tree, including one exon only found in humans and their closest living relatives, the great apes. Together, these results validate a simple pipeline for analyzing isoform diversity in genes with low expression and suggest that Kirrel3 function is fine-tuned by alternative splicing and may play a role in brain evolution.
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