Functional and dynamic profiling of transcript isoforms reveals essential roles of alternative splicing in interferon response
September 17, 2024
Summary
Type I interferon (IFN-I) plays an important role in the innate immune response through inducing IFN-I-stimulated genes (ISGs). However, how alternative splicing (AS) events, especially over time, affect their function remains poorly understood. We generated an annotation (113,843 transcripts) for IFN-I-stimulated human B cells called isoISG using high-accuracy long-read sequencing data from PacBio Sequel II/IIe. Transcript isoform profiling using isoISG revealed that isoform switching occurred in the early response to IFN-I so that ISGs would gain functional domains (e.g., C4B) or higher protein production (e.g., IRF3). Conversely, isoforms lacking functional domains increased during the late phase of IFN-I response, mainly due to intron retention events. This suggests that isoform switching both triggers and terminates IFN-I responses at the translation and protein levels. Furthermore, genetic variants influencing the isoform ratio of ISGs were associated with immunological and infectious diseases. AS has essential roles in regulating innate immune response and associated diseases.
Journal Article
JOURNAL:Cell Genomics
TITLE:Functional and dynamic profiling of transcript isoforms reveals essential roles of alternative splicing in interferon response
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xgen.2024.100654
TITLE:Functional and dynamic profiling of transcript isoforms reveals essential roles of alternative splicing in interferon response
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xgen.2024.100654
Correspondence to
Yuta Kochi, Professor
Department of Genomic Function and Diversity,
Medical Research Institute,
Tokyo Medical and Dental University(TMDU)
E-mail:y-kochi.gfd(at)mri.tmd.ac.jp
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