PLoS Genetics (Oct 2014)

Systematic dissection of coding exons at single nucleotide resolution supports an additional role in cell-specific transcriptional regulation.

  • Ramon Y Birnbaum,
  • Rupali P Patwardhan,
  • Mee J Kim,
  • Gregory M Findlay,
  • Beth Martin,
  • Jingjing Zhao,
  • Robert J A Bell,
  • Robin P Smith,
  • Angel A Ku,
  • Jay Shendure,
  • Nadav Ahituv

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004592
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. e1004592

Abstract

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In addition to their protein coding function, exons can also serve as transcriptional enhancers. Mutations in these exonic-enhancers (eExons) could alter both protein function and transcription. However, the functional consequence of eExon mutations is not well known. Here, using massively parallel reporter assays, we dissect the enhancer activity of three liver eExons (SORL1 exon 17, TRAF3IP2 exon 2, PPARG exon 6) at single nucleotide resolution in the mouse liver. We find that both synonymous and non-synonymous mutations have similar effects on enhancer activity and many of the deleterious mutation clusters overlap known liver-associated transcription factor binding sites. Carrying a similar massively parallel reporter assay in HeLa cells with these three eExons found differences in their mutation profiles compared to the liver, suggesting that enhancers could have distinct operating profiles in different tissues. Our results demonstrate that eExon mutations could lead to multiple phenotypes by disrupting both the protein sequence and enhancer activity and that enhancers can have distinct mutation profiles in different cell types.