• Media type: E-Book; Special Print
  • Title: Pervasive changes of mRNA splicing in upf1-deficient zebrafish identify rpl10a as a regulator of T cell development
  • Contributor: Lawir, Divine Fondzenyuy [Author]; Sikora, Katarzyna [Author]; O’Meara, Connor P. [Author]; Schorpp, Michael [Author]; Boehm, Thomas [Author]
  • Published: Washington, DC: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020
  • Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America ; 117, 27 (2020), 15799-15808
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (10 Seiten); Diagramme; Supporting information (1 ZIP-Datei: 1 PDF-Datei, 6 .xlsx- Dateien)
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1917812117
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  • Origination:
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  • Description: Abstract: The transcriptome of eukaryotic cells is constantly monitored for errors to avoid the production of undesired protein variants. The evolutionarily conserved nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway degrades aberrant mRNAs, but also functions in the regulation of transcript abundance in response to changed physiological states. Here, we describe a zebrafish mutant of upf1, encoding the central component of the NMD machinery. Fish homozygous for the upf1t20450 allele (Y163X) survive until day 10 after fertilization, presenting with impaired T cell development as one of the most conspicuous features of the mutant phenotype. Analysis of differentially expressed genes identified dysregulation of the pre-mRNA splicing pathway, accompanied by perturbed autoregulation of canonical splicing activators (SRSF) and repressors (HNRNP). In upf1-deficient mutants, NMD-susceptible transcripts of ribosomal proteins that are known for their role as noncanonical splicing regulators were greatly increased, most notably, rpl10a. When the levels of NMD-susceptible rpl10a transcripts were artificially increased in zebrafish larvae, T cell development was significantly impaired, suggesting that perturbed autoregulation of rpl10a splicing contributes to failing T cell development in upf1 deficiency. Our results identify an extraribosomal tissue-specific function to rpl10a in the immune system, and thus exemplify the advantages of the zebrafish model to study the effects of upf1-deficiency in the context of a vertebrate organism
  • Access State: Open Access