|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Developmentally regulated muscle type-specific alternative splicing of the COOH-terminal variable region of fast skeletal muscle troponin T and an aberrant splicing pathway to encode a mutant COOH-terminus.

First Author  Jin JP Year  1998
Journal  Biochem Biophys Res Commun Volume  242
Issue  3 Pages  540-4
PubMed ID  9464252 Mgi Jnum  J:45503
Mgi Id  MGI:1195535 Doi  10.1006/bbrc.1997.8006
Citation  Jin JP, et al. (1998) Developmentally regulated muscle type-specific alternative splicing of the COOH-terminal variable region of fast skeletal muscle troponin T and an aberrant splicing pathway to encode a mutant COOH-terminus. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 242(3):540-4
abstractText  Distinct from the cardiac and slow skeletal muscle troponin Ts, an alternative RNA splicing-generated COOH-terminal variable region exists in the fast skeletal muscle troponin T.Mutually exclusive splicing of exon 16 and 17 encoded sequence into the mature mRNA produces the alpha- and beta-isoform, respectively. By cloning and sequence analysis of large numbers of fast troponin T cDNAs, we have quantitatively demonstrated that expression of the exon 16-encoded structure is mature fast muscle-specific (its utilization ranges from null in neonatal mouse muscles to 97% in adult chicken pectoralis), indicating a functional adaptation to the contractile feature of muscle. An aberrant splicing of this variable region to exclude both exons 16 and 17 from the mRNA was found in neonatal mouse skeletal muscle by cloning and sequencing characterization of a full length fTnT cDNA. The unusual splicing of exon 18 and exon 15 in the mRNA sequence results in not only a deletion of the exon 16/17 segment but also a shift of the downstream translation reading frame to produce a troponin T polypeptide with mutant COOH-terminus. Similar to an abnormal splicing of cardiac troponin T caused by cis-mutation and a dominant allele causing human familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, this trans-factor- determined aberrant mRNA splicing pathway generates a truncated troponin T molecule lacking the developmentally regulated fast muscle-specific COOH-terminal domain, indicating potential etiopathological significance.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Authors

1 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression