Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.

Gene expression varies widely between individuals of a population, and regulatory change can underlie phenotypes of evolutionary and biomedical relevance. A key question in the field is how DNA sequence variants impact gene expression, with most mechanistic studies to date focused on the effects of...

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Main Authors: Oh Kyu Yoon, Tiffany Y Hsu, Joo Hyun Im, Rachel B Brem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3420953?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-6f0b6f03d62f4912b13331b0f54241c12020-11-25T02:23:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042012-01-0188e100288210.1371/journal.pgen.1002882Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.Oh Kyu YoonTiffany Y HsuJoo Hyun ImRachel B BremGene expression varies widely between individuals of a population, and regulatory change can underlie phenotypes of evolutionary and biomedical relevance. A key question in the field is how DNA sequence variants impact gene expression, with most mechanistic studies to date focused on the effects of genetic change on regulatory regions upstream of protein-coding sequence. By contrast, the role of RNA 3'-end processing in regulatory variation remains largely unknown, owing in part to the challenge of identifying functional elements in 3' untranslated regions. In this work, we conducted a genomic survey of transcript ends in lymphoblastoid cells from genetically distinct human individuals. Our analysis mapped the cis-regulatory architecture of 3' gene ends, finding that transcript end positions did not fall randomly in untranslated regions, but rather preferentially flanked the locations of 3' regulatory elements, including miRNA sites. The usage of these transcript length forms and motifs varied across human individuals, and polymorphisms in polyadenylation signals and other 3' motifs were significant predictors of expression levels of the genes in which they lay. Independent single-gene experiments confirmed the effects of polyadenylation variants on steady-state expression of their respective genes, and validated the regulatory function of 3' cis-regulatory sequence elements that mediated expression of these distinct RNA length forms. Focusing on the immune regulator IRF5, we established the effect of natural variation in RNA 3'-end processing on regulatory response to antigen stimulation. Our results underscore the importance of two mechanisms at play in the genetics of 3'-end variation: the usage of distinct 3'-end processing signals and the effects of 3' sequence elements that determine transcript fate. Our findings suggest that the strategy of integrating observed 3'-end positions with inferred 3' regulatory motifs will prove to be a critical tool in continued efforts to interpret human genome variation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3420953?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oh Kyu Yoon
Tiffany Y Hsu
Joo Hyun Im
Rachel B Brem
spellingShingle Oh Kyu Yoon
Tiffany Y Hsu
Joo Hyun Im
Rachel B Brem
Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Oh Kyu Yoon
Tiffany Y Hsu
Joo Hyun Im
Rachel B Brem
author_sort Oh Kyu Yoon
title Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.
title_short Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.
title_full Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.
title_fullStr Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.
title_full_unstemmed Genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human B-lymphoblastoid cells.
title_sort genetics and regulatory impact of alternative polyadenylation in human b-lymphoblastoid cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Gene expression varies widely between individuals of a population, and regulatory change can underlie phenotypes of evolutionary and biomedical relevance. A key question in the field is how DNA sequence variants impact gene expression, with most mechanistic studies to date focused on the effects of genetic change on regulatory regions upstream of protein-coding sequence. By contrast, the role of RNA 3'-end processing in regulatory variation remains largely unknown, owing in part to the challenge of identifying functional elements in 3' untranslated regions. In this work, we conducted a genomic survey of transcript ends in lymphoblastoid cells from genetically distinct human individuals. Our analysis mapped the cis-regulatory architecture of 3' gene ends, finding that transcript end positions did not fall randomly in untranslated regions, but rather preferentially flanked the locations of 3' regulatory elements, including miRNA sites. The usage of these transcript length forms and motifs varied across human individuals, and polymorphisms in polyadenylation signals and other 3' motifs were significant predictors of expression levels of the genes in which they lay. Independent single-gene experiments confirmed the effects of polyadenylation variants on steady-state expression of their respective genes, and validated the regulatory function of 3' cis-regulatory sequence elements that mediated expression of these distinct RNA length forms. Focusing on the immune regulator IRF5, we established the effect of natural variation in RNA 3'-end processing on regulatory response to antigen stimulation. Our results underscore the importance of two mechanisms at play in the genetics of 3'-end variation: the usage of distinct 3'-end processing signals and the effects of 3' sequence elements that determine transcript fate. Our findings suggest that the strategy of integrating observed 3'-end positions with inferred 3' regulatory motifs will prove to be a critical tool in continued efforts to interpret human genome variation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3420953?pdf=render
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