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First published online June 20, 2006
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.03053
Commentary |
Laboratorio de Fisiología y Biología Molecular, Departamento de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Celular, IFIBYNE-CONICET, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Ciudad Universitaria, Pabellón 2, (C1428EHA) Buenos Aires, Argentina
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: ark{at}fbmc.fcen.uba.ar)
Accepted 17 May 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: Splicing, Alternative splicing, Cancer, Signaling
| Introduction |
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`What is all this for?', a teleologist might ask. We know now that the high adaptive value of introns resides in the fact that they permitted exon shuffling in the past and alternative splicing in the present (Sharp, 1994
). However, the apparent `irrationality of introns' (I. Eperon, http://www.eurasnet.info/ian_eperon.shtml) was questioned early on following the discovery that mutations that affect splicing, quantitatively or qualitatively, are a widespread source of hereditary diseases. No matter how absurd or energy consuming a biological process appears to be, if its disruption or perturbation causes disease, it must be important, and its conservation in evolution is paramount. The links between splicing and human disease have been extensively reviewed lately (Caceres and Kornblihtt, 2002
; Cartegni et al., 2002
; Faustino and Cooper, 2003
; Pagani and Baralle, 2004
). The specific association between splicing and cancer has received less attention (Brinkman, 2004
; Venables, 2006
), perhaps because the field is still emerging. Here we examine this connection, focusing not only on mutations in cis-acting splicing sequences that are associated with cancer but also on the variations in normal splicing processes and the signals that may affect them in cancer cells.
| The basic language of splicing |
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10 nucleotides) conserved sequences located in exons or introns, either isolated or in clusters, that stimulate or inhibit the use of weak splice sites (Fig. 1D). An exonic sequence is defined as an exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) if its mutation reduces inclusion of the corresponding exon into the mature mRNA. Conversely, mutation of an exonic splicing silencer (ESS) increases inclusion of the exon. In most cases, the mechanisms of action of splicing enhancers and silencers involve the specific binding of regulatory proteins such as SR proteins (serine/arginine-rich proteins) or heterogeneous nuclear (hn)RNPs (Dreyfuss et al., 1993
Approximately 15% of mutations that cause genetic disease affect pre-mRNA splicing. Some disrupt or create splice sites. If a canonical splice site is completely disrupted, a cryptic splice site nearby is used instead, leading to aberrantly spliced mRNA molecules and failure to produce a functional protein. If the disruption is partial, the cryptic and mutated sites compete, leading to a mixed population of aberrant and normal mRNA molecules, with a reduction in normal protein levels. Creation of a new splice site has similar consequences: the new (aberrant) and the old site compete and there is a concomitant reduction in normal protein levels.
Recently, the role of mutations that create or abolish splicing enhancers and silencers in disease has been examined (Cartegni et al., 2002
; Pagani and Baralle, 2004
). This is particularly important when one studies single base changes in exonic sequences. Traditionally, these base changes were assumed to produce nonsense, missense or silent substitutions that could only affect the quality of the encoded protein. However, we now know that in many cases they disrupt or create functional ESEs or ESSs, and provoke changes in the levels of inclusion of the exons to which they map.
Alternative splicing
When two or more splice sites compete, alternative splicing generates mRNA variants that yield different polypeptides from a single gene (reviewed by Black, 2003
). Alternative splicing is more a rule than an exception: it affects an estimated 60% of human genes (Lander et al., 2001
). Its regulation not only depends on the interaction of SR and hnRNP proteins with splicing enhancers and silencers, but is also coupled to Pol II transcription, as in the case of other pre-mRNA processing reactions (reviewed by Bentley, 2005
; Kornblihtt et al., 2004
; Maniatis and Reed, 2002
; Proudfoot et al., 2002
).
Fig. 2A illustrates the different modes of alternative splicing, which we distinguish from alternative transcriptional initiation (Fig. 2B). Alternative transcriptional initiation generates mRNA diversity but is not alternative splicing because there are no competing splice sites.
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| Cancer and mutations that affect splicing |
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LKB1
LKB1 is a tumor suppressor gene that encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase involved in the control of several cellular processes, including cell-cycle arrest, p53-mediated apoptosis, Ras-induced transformation, cell polarity. Its second intron belongs to the minor spliceosome class that obeys the AU-AC rule. Mutations of LKB1 that lead to reduced levels of the protein are found in patients with Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome (PJS), an autosomal dominant disorder associated with gastrointestinal polyposis and an increased cancer risk. A group of PJS patients carry a mutation that affects the 5' splice site of intron 2 (IVS2+1A>G). Interestingly, the mutated 5' splice site is still used but not in conjunction with its normal 3' splice site. Instead, cryptic, non-canonical 3' splice sites adjacent to the normal one are used, which leads to frameshifting and consequently to the appearance of premature termination codons in the aberrantly spliced transcripts (Hastings et al., 2005
). The mutation thus affects the fidelity of splicing. It also provides a tool to dissect the differences between minor and major spliceosome requirements.
KIT
Another interesting example involves the oncogene KIT. The encoded protein is a member of the type III receptor tyrosine kinase family whose constitutive activation is associated with gastrointestinal stromal tumors. Chen et al. found patients with deletions of an intron-exon segment encompassing the 3' splice site of intron 10; these deletions concomitantly create an intra-exonic 3' splice site within exon 11 (Chen et al., 2005
). The resulting polypeptides remain in-frame but lack an internal stretch that is crucial for auto-inhibition of the kinase. Structural studies of the mutated kinase revealed a conformation consistent with constitutive activation.
CDH17
Liver intestine cadherin (LI-cadherin) is a cell-cell adhesion protein present in the plasma membrane. Its gene, CDH17, has been reported to be overexpressed in hepatocellular carcinomas, as well as in gastric and pancreatic cancer. Similarly, splicing variants lacking exon 7 are strongly associated with poor prognosis and a high incidence of tumor recurrence. Exon 7 skipping seems to be caused by two types of point mutation: disruption of the branch site of intron 6 and a base change at position 651 of exon 6 (Wang et al., 2005
). The latter might affect exon 7 inclusion by generating an ESS or disrupting an ESE located in exon 6. Why the lack of the protein segment encoded by exon 7 provokes effects similar to those resulting from overexpression of the full-length CDH17 remains to be determined.
KLF6
A case in which the molecular defect is better defined is a point mutation in intron 1 of the KLF6 gene that generates a binding site for the SR protein SRp40. KLF6 is a Kruppel-like Zn-finger transcription factor that functions as a tumor suppressor and is somatically inactivated in prostate cancer (Narla et al., 2005
). The new site for SRp40 apparently works as an atypical intronic splicing enhancer (ISE), provoking the use of three cryptic splice sites in exon 2. The proteins predicted to arise from the aberrant mRNAs lack parts of the activation and/or DNA-binding domain and presumably act as dominant-negative mutants.
BRCA1
Germline mutations in the BRCA1 gene are well-known markers of predisposition to breast and ovarian cancers. An inherited point mutation in exon 18, classifiable as a nonsense mutation, was the first shown to affect splicing: it disrupts an ESE and provokes exon 18 skipping (Mazoyer et al., 1998
). Since then, a panoply of mutations that presumably affect splicing enhancers and silencers have been described in BRCA1. A recent in silico approach using the program ESEfinder (Cartegni et al., 2003
) identified 23 highly conserved ESEs in the 22 exons of the BRCA1 gene. About 60% of these ESEs are predicted to be affected by sequence variants reported in the Breast Cancer Information Core (Pettigrew et al., 2005
). These findings stress how crucial it is when one attempts to interpret the molecular basis of genetic disease to define whether base changes in coding regions act at the translational level (generating amino acid changes, stop codons, or silent mutations) or affect splicing.
| Cancer-associated alterations of splicing patterns |
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Ron
Ron is a heterodimeric protein formed by
and ß subunits, both derived from the proteolytic cleavage of a common precursor. It is the tyrosine kinase receptor for macrophage-stimulating protein, and binding to this ligand triggers a signaling cascade that regulates a variety of cellular activities, such as cell growth, motility and invasion of extracellular matrices. These occur during epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a process that is essential for embryonic development and also participates in tumor progression in epithelial tissues (Radisky, 2005
; Thiery and Sleeman, 2006
). An alternatively spliced isoform termed
Ron was identified in human gastric carcinoma cells and induces an invasive phenotype in transfected cells (Collesi et al., 1996
).
Ron mRNA originates by skipping of exon 11, which leads to the deletion of a 49 amino acid stretch in the ß chain of the resulting polypeptide. This deletion abolishes the proteolytical cleavage and renders the protein constitutively active.
Ghigna et al. not only confirmed that Ron splicing is altered in breast and colon cancers but also shed light on the molecular mechanism that regulates it (Ghigna et al., 2005
). They identified two regulatory elements within exon 12 that control the level of inclusion of exon 11. The binding of the SR protein SF2/ASF to one of these stimulates skipping of exon 11, increasing the level of the
Ron isoform. More excitingly, not only does overexpression of SF2/ASF lead to morphological and molecular changes characteristic of an EMT, but knockdown of SF2/ASF by RNA interference (RNAi) reduces the levels of
Ron and concomitantly decreases cell motility. Similarly, RNAi directed against
Ron reduces cell motility and partially reverses the morphological changes induced by overexpression of SF2/ASF. Thus, SF2/ASF could regulate malignant transformation of certain epithelial tumors by inducing a
Ron-dependent EMT.
Other trans-acting regulators could act in the same way and we can therefore speculate that variations in expression and/or activity of splicing factors could lead to changes in the splicing patterns of certain mRNAs whose protein products are involved in different stages of tumor progression. The obvious question is which signaling molecules control SR protein activity and what events lead to their deregulation.
Rac
Matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) are upregulated in nearly all cancers (Egeblad and Werb, 2002
). Their activity modifies cell-cell and cell-substratum adhesion, promoting tumor cell proliferation, invasion, angiogenesis and metastasis. In addition, they influence genomic surveillance, causing genomic instability (Radisky and Bissell, 2006
). MMPs have also been implicated in splicing regulation. Radisky et al. demonstrated that synthesis of Rac1b, an alternatively spliced isoform of the Rho-family GTPase Rac1, is induced by treatment of normal mammary epithelial cells with MMP-3 and that Rac1b activity is required for MMP-3-triggered EMT in these cells (Radisky et al., 2005
).
Rac1b is generated by inclusion of a 57-nucleotide cassette exon. It accumulates in colorectal and breast tumors, and shows transforming properties when overexpressed in cultured cells. Unlike the
Ron example, the factors that regulate RAC1 splicing have not yet been characterized. However, preliminary evidence indicates that changes in SR protein expression modulate RAC1 splicing patterns (F. Pelisch, D. Radisky and A.S., unpublished results). Moreover, MMP-3-dependent Rac1b synthesis triggers an increase in cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to genomic instability (Radisky et al., 2005
), which can drive tumorigenesis. Li and Manley have linked genomic instability to SR protein function (Li and Manley, 2005
). They showed that, when cultured cells are depleted of SF2/ASF, nascent pre-mRNA remains hybridized to the template DNA strand, leading to increased damage to the displaced complementary DNA strand. They propose that coupling between transcription and pre-mRNA processing therefore not only assures efficient production of mature mRNAs but also protects chromosomes from potentially deleterious DNA damage. Further investigations will reveal whether the expression and/or activity of certain splicing factors is involved in the genomic instability observed upon Rac1b production.
p53
The delicate balance between cell proliferation, differentiation and death maintains tissue homeostasis within multicellular organisms. Deregulation of any of these processes can lead to tumorigenesis. Inactivation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene is a very frequent event in human cancer (Oren, 2003
). p53 is a crucial protein involved in cell-cycle control, apoptosis and maintenance of genetic stability. It was thought to exist as a single isoform. However, multiple isoforms generated through the use of two different promoters and alternative splicing have recently been discovered, making p53 similar to its relatives p63 and p73 (Bourdon et al., 2005
; Prives and Manfredi, 2005
; Rohaly et al., 2005
). Bourdon et al. showed that these isoforms are expressed in a tissue-dependent manner and that their expression pattern is altered in human breast tumors (Bourdon et al., 2005
). The regulators of promoter selection and alternative splicing of p53 still needs to be elucidated.
The p53 regulators MDM2 (and its human analog HDM2) and MDMX (and its human analog HDMX) also undergo alternative splicing. Binding of MDM2 to p53 inhibits its transcriptional function and also facilitates its degradation by the proteasome. MDMX (also named MDM4) heterodimerizes with MDM2, affecting MDM2 activity. More than 40 MDM2/HDM2 transcripts, including alternatively as well as aberrantly spliced forms, have been identified both in tumors and normal tissue. Some of these variants encode proteins that possess transforming properties in vitro and in vivo (Bartel et al., 2002
; Lukas et al., 2001
). Genomic mutations that can account for the observed usage of cryptic splice sites and the generation of aberrantly spliced isoforms have not been found (Lukas et al., 2001
). Moreover, an aberrantly spliced and tumor-specific HDMX isoform has been recently described. This transcript, isolated from a thyroid tumor cell line, encodes a protein named HDMX211, which enhances MDM2 protein levels and counteracts its p53-degrading function (Giglio et al., 2005
).
| Signal transduction, splicing and cancer |
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Several reports implicate other Ras-dependent pathways in the regulation of alternative splicing of the genes encoding agrin, CD44 and CD45 (Konig et al., 1998
; Lynch and Weiss, 2000
; Smith et al., 1997
; Weg-Remers et al., 2001
; Weg-Remers et al., 2002
). CD44 is one of the most studied alternatively spliced genes in cancer because inclusion of variable exons correlates with tumor development and metastasis (Brinkman, 2004
; Stickeler et al., 1999
; Venables, 2004
). In T-lymphoma cells, phorbol-ester-dependent activation of extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) leads to phosphorylation of the nuclear RNA-binding protein Sam68, which regulates alternative splicing of variable exon 5 in CD44 (Matter et al., 2002
). Cheng and Sharp recently identified SRm160 as another Ras-regulated splicing co-activator responsible for inclusion of this exon in CD44 (Cheng and Sharp, 2006
). Furthermore, they demonstrated that silencing of this factor decreases cell invasiveness, providing another link between regulation of alternative splicing and tumorigenesis.
Several questions remain to be answered. First, whether changes in the splicing patterns of different genes involved in neoplastic transformation result from the deregulation of a certain set of splicing factors. Second, whether a given extracellular signal can affect different alternative splicing events that cooperatively participate in tumor progression.
Signaling to the splicing machinery
It is becoming increasingly clear that alternative splicing is regulated by extracellular signals through the activation of complex networks of transduction pathways (Lynch, 2004
; Pelisch et al., 2005
; Shin and Manley, 2004
). However, data addressing how these extracellular signals impinge upon splicing factor activity are scarce (Allemand et al., 2005
; Blaustein et al., 2005
; Matter et al., 2002
; Patel et al., 2005
; van der Houven van Oordt et al., 2000
; Xie et al., 2003
). Serine phosphorylation of the arginine- and serine-rich (RS) domain is an important modulator of SR protein activity and localization. Protein kinases that phosphorylate SR proteins and their antagonistic hnRNP proteins could play a crucial role in linking extracellular cues to regulation of alternative splicing. A recent study (Ngo et al., 2005
) supports a model in which SF2/ASF is first phosphorylated in the cytoplasm by SR-protein-specific kinase 1 (SRPK1) on only a few serine residues within the RS domain. This hypophosphorylated SF2/ASF is imported into the nucleus and stored in nuclear speckles. Release of SF2/ASF from these storage sites and its recruitment to active sites of transcription requires a second round of phosphorylation, which is carried out by CDC-like kinase 1 (CLK). Dephosphorylation of SF2/ASF is required for its activity during mRNA splicing, and so it is conceivable that it must undergo dephosphorylation by as-yet-unknown phosphatases (Huang et al., 2004
).
Although SRPK and CLK have been identified as SR protein kinases, signaling pathways that involve these kinases have not been identified. As already mentioned, AKT can also phosphorylate SR proteins, in particular SF2/ASF, 9G8 and SRp40. ERK phosphorylates the RNA-binding protein Sam68, which is involved in the regulation of CD44 alternative splicing (Matter et al., 2002
). ERK-dependent activation of Sam68 triggers the formation of a macromolecular complex that contains Sam68, Pol II and Brm (a component of the SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex). This interacts with the nascent transcript, stalling Pol II (Batsche et al., 2006
). Such pausing could favor inclusion of the variable exons within the mature mRNA, which would be consistent with the proposed kinetic coupling between transcription and splicing (Kornblihtt, 2006
).
The balance of different kinase activities could modulate the function of splicing regulatory proteins and consequently modify splicing patterns. But there are still more questions than answers. What is the SR protein specificity, if any, of all these kinases? Is there a precise order in which each phosphorylation takes place? Which residues are involved in each case? Does each kinase affect different SR protein properties (e.g. RNA binding, protein-protein interaction, or protein localization) or functions (e.g. splicing, surveillance, or translation) (Huang and Steitz, 2005
)?
| Conclusion and perspectives |
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Mutations that alter cis-acting splicing elements can modify mRNA quality and therefore protein function. Activation of signaling pathways that can affect the activity of splicing regulatory factors or modify the balance between them can also change the proportions of mRNA splicing isoforms. Both can lead to the deregulation of crucial cellular processes such as adhesion, proliferation, differentiation, death, motility and invasion (Fig. 3), all of which contribute to cancer.
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| Acknowledgments |
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