The human SWI/SNF subunit Brm is a regulator of alternative splicing

E Batsché, M Yaniv, C Muchardt - Nature structural & molecular biology, 2006 - nature.com
E Batsché, M Yaniv, C Muchardt
Nature structural & molecular biology, 2006nature.com
The SWI/SNF (mating-type switch/sucrose nonfermenting) complex involved in chromatin
remodeling on promoters has also been detected on the coding region of genes. Here we
show that SWI/SNF can function as a regulator of alternative splicing. We found that the
catalytic subunit Brm favors inclusion of variant exons in the mRNA of several genes,
including E-cadherin, BIM, cyclin D1 and CD44. Consistent with this, Brm associates with
several components of the spliceosome and with Sam68, an ERK-activated enhancer of …
Abstract
The SWI/SNF (mating-type switch/sucrose nonfermenting) complex involved in chromatin remodeling on promoters has also been detected on the coding region of genes. Here we show that SWI/SNF can function as a regulator of alternative splicing. We found that the catalytic subunit Brm favors inclusion of variant exons in the mRNA of several genes, including E-cadherin, BIM, cyclin D1 and CD44. Consistent with this, Brm associates with several components of the spliceosome and with Sam68, an ERK-activated enhancer of variant exon inclusion. Examination of the CD44 gene revealed that Brm induced accumulation of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) with a modified CTD phosphorylation pattern on regions encoding variant exons. Altogether, our data suggest that on genes regulated by SWI/SNF, Brm contributes to the crosstalk between transcription and RNA processing by decreasing RNAPII elongation rate and facilitating recruitment of the splicing machinery to variant exons with suboptimal splice sites.
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