A Role For Alternative Splicing In Circadian Control Of Exocytosis And Glucose Homeostasis (Vol 34, Pg 1089, 2020)

GENES & DEVELOPMENT(2020)

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Abstract
The circadian clock is encoded by a negative transcriptional feedback loop that coordinates physiology and behavior through molecular programs that remain incompletely understood. Here, we reveal rhythmic genome-wide alternative splicing (AS) of pre-mRNAs encoding regulators of peptidergic secretion within pancreatic beta cells that are perturbed in Clock(-/-) and Bmal1(-/-) beta-cell lines. We show that the RNA-binding protein THRAP3 (thyroid hormone receptor-associated protein 3) regulates circadian clock-dependent AS by binding to exons at coding sequences flanking exons that are more frequently skipped in clock mutant beta cells, including transcripts encoding Cask (calcium/calmodulin-dependent serine protein kinase) and Madd (MAP kinase-activating death domain). Depletion of THRAP3 restores expression of the long isoforms of Cask and Madd, and mimicking exon skipping in these transcripts through antisense oligonucleotide delivery in wild-type islets reduces glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Finally, we identify shared networks of alternatively spliced exocytic genes from islets of rodent models of diet-induced obesity that significantly overlap with clock mutants. Our results establish a role for pre-mRNA alternative splicing in beta-cell function across the sleep/wake cycle.
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Key words
circadian clock,insulin secretion,exocytosis,alternative splicing,RNA sequencing,transcriptomics,THRAP3,MADD,CASK,SNAP25
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