Cell Systems
Volume 6, Issue 2, 28 February 2018, Pages 245-255.e5
Journal home page for Cell Systems

Report
Universal Alternative Splicing of Noncoding Exons

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cels.2017.12.005Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Highlights

  • Targeted short-read and single-molecule transcriptome survey of human chr21

  • Unlike protein-coding exons, noncoding exons are universally alternatively spliced

  • Mouse noncoding RNAs are similarly diverse but predominantly divergent

  • Human splicing profiles (but not expression) are recapitulated on chr21 in mouse cell

Summary

The human transcriptome is so large, diverse, and dynamic that, even after a decade of investigation by RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), we have yet to resolve its true dimensions. RNA-seq suffers from an expression-dependent bias that impedes characterization of low-abundance transcripts. We performed targeted single-molecule and short-read RNA-seq to survey the transcriptional landscape of a single human chromosome (Hsa21) at unprecedented resolution. Our analysis reaches the lower limits of the transcriptome, identifying a fundamental distinction between protein-coding and noncoding gene content: almost every noncoding exon undergoes alternative splicing, producing a seemingly limitless variety of isoforms. Analysis of syntenic regions of the mouse genome shows that few noncoding exons are shared between human and mouse, yet human splicing profiles are recapitulated on Hsa21 in mouse cells, indicative of regulation by a deeply conserved splicing code. We propose that noncoding exons are functionally modular, with alternative splicing generating an enormous repertoire of potential regulatory RNAs and a rich transcriptional reservoir for gene evolution.

Keywords

mammalian transcriptome
alternative splicing
noncoding RNA
lncRNA
RNA sequencing
RNA CaptureSeq

Cited by (0)

11

These authors contributed equally

12

Lead Contact