← Back to search

An RNA code for the FOX2 splicing regulator revealed by mapping RNA-protein interactions in stem cells.

Nature structural & molecular biology · 2009 · Vol. 16 (2) · pp. 130-7

Abstract

The elucidation of a code for regulated splicing has been a long-standing goal in understanding the control of post-transcriptional gene expression events that are crucial for cell survival, differentiation and development. We decoded functional RNA elements in vivo by constructing an RNA map for the cell type-specific splicing regulator FOX2 (also known as RBM9) via cross-linking immunoprecipitation coupled with high-throughput sequencing (CLIP-seq) in human embryonic stem cells. The map identified a large cohort of specific FOX2 targets, many of which are themselves splicing regulators, and comparison between the FOX2 binding profile and validated splicing events revealed a general rule for FOX2-regulated exon inclusion or skipping in a position-dependent manner. These findings suggest that FOX2 functions as a critical regulator of a splicing network, and we further show that FOX2 is important for the survival of human embryonic stem cells.

Publication Types

["Journal Article", "Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural", "Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't"]

Keywords

[]

MeSH Terms

["Alternative Splicing", "Cell Survival", "Embryonic Stem Cells", "Exons", "Humans", "Immunoprecipitation", "RNA Splice Sites", "RNA Splicing Factors", "RNA-Binding Proteins", "Repressor Proteins", "Sequence Analysis, RNA"]

Funding

R01 HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
R01 GM049369 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
GM049369 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
S10 RR025547 NCRR NIH HHS (United States)