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Complex landscape of alternative splicing in myeloid neoplasms.

Courtney E HershbergerDevlin C MoyerVera AdemaCassandra M KerrWencke WalterStephan HutterManja MeggendorferConstance BaerWolfgang KernNiroshan NadarajahSven TwardziokMikkael A SekeresClaudia HaferlachTorsten HaferlachJaroslaw P MaciejewskiRichard A Padgett
Published in: Leukemia (2020)
Myeloid neoplasms are characterized by frequent mutations in at least seven components of the spliceosome that have distinct roles in the process of pre-mRNA splicing. Hotspot mutations in SF3B1, SRSF2, U2AF1 and loss of function mutations in ZRSR2 have revealed widely different aberrant splicing signatures with little overlap. However, previous studies lacked the power necessary to identify commonly mis-spliced transcripts in heterogeneous patient cohorts. By performing RNA-Seq on bone marrow samples from 1258 myeloid neoplasm patients and 63 healthy bone marrow donors, we identified transcripts frequently mis-spliced by mutated splicing factors (SF), rare SF mutations with common alternative splicing (AS) signatures, and SF-dependent neojunctions. We characterized 17,300 dysregulated AS events using a pipeline designed to predict the impact of mis-splicing on protein function. Meta-splicing analysis revealed a pattern of reduced levels of retained introns among disease samples that was exacerbated in patients with splicing factor mutations. These introns share characteristics with "detained introns," a class of introns that have been shown to promote differentiation by detaining pro-proliferative transcripts in the nucleus. In this study, we have functionally characterized 17,300 targets of mis-splicing by the SF mutations, identifying a common pathway by which AS may promote maintenance of a proliferative state.
Keyphrases
  • bone marrow
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • dendritic cells
  • acute myeloid leukemia
  • newly diagnosed
  • gene expression
  • chronic kidney disease
  • dna methylation
  • prognostic factors