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Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, RNA, 9(23), p. 1393-1403, 2017

DOI: 10.1261/rna.059428.116

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RBM24 promotes U1 snRNP recognition of the mutated 5′ splice site in theIKBKAPgene of familial dysautonomia

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The 5′ splice site mutation (IVS20+6T>C) of theinhibitor of κ light polypeptide gene enhancer in B cells, kinase complex-associated protein(IKBKAP) gene in familial dysautonomia (FD) is at the sixth intronic nucleotide of the 5′ splice site. It is known to weaken U1 snRNP recognition and result in an aberrantly spliced mRNA product in neuronal tissue, but normally spliced mRNA in other tissues. Aberrantly splicedIKBKAPmRNA abrogates IKK complex-associated protein (IKAP)/elongator protein 1 (ELP1) expression and results in a defect of neuronal cell development in FD. To elucidate the tissue-dependent regulatory mechanism, we screened an expression library of major RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) with our mammalian dual-color splicing reporter system and identified RBM24 as a regulator. RBM24 functioned as a cryptic intronic splicing enhancer binding to an element (IVS20+13–29) downstream from the intronic 5′ splice site mutation in theIKBKAPgene and promoted U1 snRNP recognition only to the mutated 5′ splice site (and not the wild-type 5′ splice site). Our results show that tissue-specific expression of RBM24 can explain the neuron-specific aberrant splicing ofIKBKAPexon 20 in familial dysautonomia, and that ectopic expression of RBM24 in neuronal tissue could be a novel therapeutic target of the disease.