Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • dzf (8)
  • exons (3)
  • ILF2 (3)
  • ILF3 (4)
  • introns (2)
  • mammals (1)
  • nucleic acids (1)
  • proteins complex (1)
  • proteins controls (2)
  • research (1)
  • rna (1)
  • surfaces protein (1)
  • ZFR (6)
  • zinc fingers (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Proteins containing DZF (domain associated with zinc fingers) modules play important roles throughout gene expression, from transcription to translation. Derived from nucleotidyltransferases but lacking catalytic residues, DZF domains serve as heterodimerization surfaces between DZF protein pairs. Three DZF proteins are widely expressed in mammalian tissues, ILF2, ILF3 and ZFR, which form mutually exclusive ILF2-ILF3 and ILF2-ZFR heterodimers. Using eCLIP-Seq, we find that ZFR binds across broad intronic regions to regulate the alternative splicing of cassette and mutually exclusive exons. ZFR preferentially binds dsRNA in vitro and is enriched on introns containing conserved dsRNA elements in cells. Many splicing events are similarly altered upon depletion of any of the three DZF proteins; however, we also identify independent and opposing roles for ZFR and ILF3 in alternative splicing regulation. Along with widespread involvement in cassette exon splicing, the DZF proteins control the fidelity and regulation of over a dozen highly validated mutually exclusive splicing events. Our findings indicate that the DZF proteins form a complex regulatory network that leverages dsRNA binding by ILF3 and ZFR to modulate splicing regulation and fidelity. © Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research 2023.

    Citation

    Nazmul Haque, Alexander Will, Atlanta G Cook, J Robert Hogg. A network of DZF proteins controls alternative splicing regulation and fidelity. Nucleic acids research. 2023 Jul 07;51(12):6411-6429

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 37144502

    View Full Text