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    Gene. 2006 Feb 1;366(2):325-34. Epub 2005 Nov 28.

    An intronic polyadenylation site in human and mouse CstF-77 genes suggests an evolutionarily conserved regulatory mechanism.

    Pan Z, Zhang H, Hague LK, Lee JY, Lutz CS, Tian B.

    Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, New Jersey Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, NJ 07101, USA.

    Human CstF-77 is one of the three subunits of cleavage stimulation factor (CstF) that is essential for mRNA polyadenylation. Its Drosophila homologue, suppressor of forked [su(f)], contains an intronic poly(A) site, which can lead to a short transcript without a stop codon. By both bioinformatic searches and validation with molecular biology experiments, we found that human and mouse CstF-77 genes also contain an intronic poly(A) site, which can be utilized to produce short CstF-77 transcripts lacking sequences encoding domains that are involved in many of the CstF-77 functions. The genomic sequence surrounding the poly(A) site is highly conserved among all vertebrates, but is not present in non-vertebrate species. Using public Serial Analysis of Gene Expression (SAGE) data, we found that the intronic poly(A) site is utilized in a wide range of tissues. This finding indicates that vertebrates may employ a similar alternative polyadenylation mechanism to modulate CstF-77, highlighting the importance of the regulation of CstF-77 in various species.

    PMID: 16316725 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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