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Pan-tissue analysis of allelic alternative polyadenylation suggests widespread functional regulation.

Yisheng LiBernhard SchaefkeXudong ZouMin ZhangFlorian HeydWei SunBin ZhangGuipeng LiWeizheng LiangYuhao HeJuexiao ZhouYunfei LiLiang FangYuhui HuWei Chen
Published in: Molecular systems biology (2021)
Alternative polyadenylation (APA) is a major layer of gene regulation. However, it has recently been argued that most APA represents molecular noise. To clarify their functional relevance and evolution, we quantified allele-specific APA patterns in multiple tissues from an F1 hybrid mouse. We found a clearly negative correlation between gene expression and APA diversity for the 2,866 genes (24.9%) with a dominant polyadenylation site (PAS) usage above or equal to 90%, suggesting that their other PASs represent molecular errors. Among the remaining genes with multiple PASs, 3,971 genes (34.5%) express two or more isoforms with potentially functional importance. Interestingly, the genes with potentially functional minor PASs specific to neuronal tissues often express two APA isoforms with distinct subcellular localizations. Furthermore, our analysis of cis-APA divergence shows its pattern across tissues is distinct from that of gene expression. Finally, we demonstrate that the relative usage of alternative PASs is not only affected by their cis-regulatory elements, but also by potential coupling between transcriptional and APA regulation as well as competition kinetics between alternative sites.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide identification
  • transcription factor
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