Widespread establishment and regulatory impact of Alu exons in human genes

  • Shihao Shen
  • , Lan Lin
  • , James J. Cai
  • , P. Jiang
  • , Elizabeth J. Kenkel
  • , Mallory R. Stroik
  • , Seiko Sato
  • , Beverly L. Davidson
  • , Yi Xing

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

109 Scopus citations

Abstract

The Alu element hasbeen amajor source ofnewexons during primate evolution. Thousands of human genes contain spliced exons derived from Alu elements. However, identifying Alu exons that have acquired genuine biological functions remains a major challenge. We investigated the creation and establishment of Alu exons in human genes, using transcriptome profiles of human tissues generated by high-throughput RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) combined with extensive RT-PCR analysis. More than 25% of Alu exons analyzed by RNA-Seq have estimated transcript inclusion levels of at least 50% in the humancerebellum, indicating widespread establishment of Alu exons in human genes. Genes encoding zinc finger transcription factors have significantly higher levels of Alu exonization. Importantly, Alu exonswith high splicing activities are strongly enriched in the 5′-UTR, and two-thirds (10/15) of 5′-UTR Alu exons tested by luciferase reporter assays significantly alter mRNA translational efficiency. Mutational analysis reveals the specific molecular mechanisms by which newly created 5′-UTR Alu exons modulate translational efficiency, such as the creation or elongation of upstream ORFs that repress the translation of the primary ORFs. This study presents genomic evidence that amajor functional consequence of Alu exonization is the lineage-specific evolution of translational regulation. Moreover, the preferential creation and establishment of Alu exons in zinc finger genes suggest that Alu exonization may have globally affected the evolution of primate and human transcriptomes by regulating the protein production of master transcriptional regulators in specific lineages.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2837-2842
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume108
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 15 2011

Keywords

  • Alternative splicing
  • Deep sequencing
  • Transcriptome evolution
  • Transposable element
  • uORF

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