TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolution of intron splicing towards optimized gene expression is based on various Cis- and Trans-molecular mechanisms
AU - Frumkin, Idan
AU - Yofe, Ido
AU - Bar-Ziv, Raz
AU - Gurvich, Yonat
AU - Lu, Yen-Yun
AU - Voichek, Yoav
AU - Towers, Ruth
AU - Schirman, Dvir
AU - Krebber, Heike
AU - Pilpel, Yitzhak
N1 - We thank Martin Mikl for help with the qPCR experiments and Emmanuel Levy and Meta Heidenreich for help with CRISPR protocol in yeast. We thank Xiaoxue Snow Zhou, Daniel Richard Corbi, and Angelika Amon for providing help and essential materials. We also thank Shlomit Gilad and Sima Benjamin from the Nancy & Stephen Grand Israel National Center for Personalized Medicine (G-INCPM) for assistance with genome sequencing. Our gratitude goes to Dana Bar-Zvi for help with the analysis of genome sequencing data. We also greatly appreciate comments about the text from Tslil Ast, Orna Dahan, and Avihu Yona and the entire Pilpel lab for discussions of the project. IF thanks the Azrieli Foundation for an Azrieli PhD Fellowship. YP is the incumbent of the Ben May Professorial Chair.
PY - 2019/8/23
Y1 - 2019/8/23
N2 - Splicing expands, reshapes, and regulates the transcriptome of eukaryotic organisms. Despite its importance, key questions remain unanswered, including the following: Can splicing evolve when organisms adapt to new challenges? How does evolution optimize inefficiency of introns' splicing and of the splicing machinery? To explore these questions, we evolved yeast cells that were engineered to contain an inefficiently spliced intron inside a gene whose protein product was under selection for an increased expression level. We identified a combination of mutations in Cis (within the gene of interest) and in Trans (in mRNA-maturation machinery). Surprisingly, the mutations in Cis resided outside of known intronic functional sites and improved the intron's splicing efficiency potentially by easing tight mRNA structures. One of these mutations hampered a protein's domain that was not under selection, demonstrating the evolutionary flexibility of multi-domain proteins as one domain functionality was improved at the expense of the other domain. The Trans adaptations resided in two proteins, Npl3 and Gbp2, that bind pre-mRNAs and are central to their maturation. Interestingly, these mutations either increased or decreased the affinity of these proteins to mRNA, presumably allowing faster spliceosome recruitment or increased time before degradation of the pre-mRNAs, respectively. Altogether, our work reveals various mechanistic pathways toward optimizations of intron splicing to ultimately adapt gene expression patterns to novel demands.
AB - Splicing expands, reshapes, and regulates the transcriptome of eukaryotic organisms. Despite its importance, key questions remain unanswered, including the following: Can splicing evolve when organisms adapt to new challenges? How does evolution optimize inefficiency of introns' splicing and of the splicing machinery? To explore these questions, we evolved yeast cells that were engineered to contain an inefficiently spliced intron inside a gene whose protein product was under selection for an increased expression level. We identified a combination of mutations in Cis (within the gene of interest) and in Trans (in mRNA-maturation machinery). Surprisingly, the mutations in Cis resided outside of known intronic functional sites and improved the intron's splicing efficiency potentially by easing tight mRNA structures. One of these mutations hampered a protein's domain that was not under selection, demonstrating the evolutionary flexibility of multi-domain proteins as one domain functionality was improved at the expense of the other domain. The Trans adaptations resided in two proteins, Npl3 and Gbp2, that bind pre-mRNAs and are central to their maturation. Interestingly, these mutations either increased or decreased the affinity of these proteins to mRNA, presumably allowing faster spliceosome recruitment or increased time before degradation of the pre-mRNAs, respectively. Altogether, our work reveals various mechanistic pathways toward optimizations of intron splicing to ultimately adapt gene expression patterns to novel demands.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85071768948&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000423
DO - https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000423
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1544-9173
VL - 17
JO - PLoS Biology
JF - PLoS Biology
IS - 8
M1 - e3000423
ER -