Home About Press Employ Contact Spyglass Advanced Search
HHMI Logo
HHMI News
HHMI News
Scientists & Research
Scientists & Research
Janelia Farm
Janelia Farm
Grants & Fellowships
Grants & Fellowships
Resources
Resources
  Scientists & Research
  Overview  
dashed line
  FindSci  
dashed line
Investigators
dashed line
  Professors  
dashed line
  International Research Scholars  

HHMI-NIH Research Scholars
Learn about the HHMI-NIH Research Scholars Program, also known as the Cloister Program. Moresmall arrow

dashed line

Janelia Farm Research Campus
Learn about the new HHMI research campus located in Virginia. Moresmall arrow

HHMI International Research Scholars
Alberto R. Kornblihtt, Ph.D.
photo

BIOGRAPHY:

Dr. Kornblihtt received a Ph.D. in biochemistry in 1980 from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina. He conducted postdoctoral studies in the United Kingdom at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford. He has received the Bernardo Houssay Prize from the National Research Council of Argentina, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and in 2000 was awarded the Antorchas Fellowship. He currently holds the position of Professor in the Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales of the University of Buenos Aires. His HHMI-funded project involves mechanisms of coupling between transcription and alternative mRNA splicing in human cells.

RESEARCH ABSTRACT SUMMARY:

Control of Alternative Splicing by RNA pol II Elongation

Alternative splicing (AS) is a major contributor to proteome diversity in metazoans. AS of the fibronectin extra domain I (EDI) exon is controlled by RNA polymerase II (pol II) elongation and by the binding of the splicing factor SF2/ASF to an exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) present in EDI. Faster elongation rates elicit higher exon skipping according to a model where skipping occurs because the 3′ splice site (ss) of the upstream intron is suboptimal compared with the 3′ss of the downstream intron. We tested the model in cis, by strengthening the suboptimal 3′ss, and in trans, by looking at AS when transcription is performed by a "slow" pol II mutant. We found that the better the exon is recognized by the splicing machinery, the less its splicing is affected by pol II elongation (Nogués et al., J. Biol. Chem. 278:52166–52171, 2003) and that transcription by a "slow" polymerase not only inhibits EDI skipping but also affects alternative splicing of other genes such as adenovirus E1a and Drosophila's Ultrabithorax (de la Mata et al., Mol. Cell 12:525–532, 2003).

We prepared minigenes with two EDI regions arranged in tandem under a single promoter. We found that the proximal AS event influences the distal one: disruption of the ESE at the proximal EDI not only prevents its own inclusion but favors skipping of a wild-type distal EDI exon. The effect is polar in nature because disruption of the distal EDI ESE does not affect skipping of the proximal one, which suggests a strong link with transcription.

The human transcriptional coactivator CA150 was reported to decrease transcriptional elongation by interacting with pol II carboxy-terminal domain. Consistent with our model, overexpression of CA150 provokes a fourfold increase in EDI inclusion. Paradoxically, reduction in endogenous levels of CA150 by RNA interference also increases EDI inclusion, indicating dual roles for this coactivator.


Photo: Dominic Chaplin, Pine Creek Pictures

Related Links

AT HHMI

bullet icon

HHMI's International Program

dashed line
 Back to Topto the top
HHMI Logo

Home | About HHMI | Press Room | Employment | Contact

© 2008 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | e-mail: webmaster@hhmi.org