Abstract
Hypoxia-induced alternative splicing (AS) regulates tumor progression and metastasis. Little is known about how such AS is controlled and whether higher-order genome and nuclear domain (ND) organizations dictate these processes. We observe that hypoxia-responsive alternatively spliced genes position near nuclear speckle (NS), the ND that enhances splicing efficiency. NS-resident MALAT1 long noncoding RNA, induced in response to hypoxia, regulates hypoxia-responsive AS. MALAT1 achieves this by organizing the SR-family of splicing factor, SRSF1, near NS and regulating the binding of SRSF1 to pre-mRNAs. Mechanistically, MALAT1 enhances the recruitment of SRSF1 to elongating RNA polymerase II (pol II) by promoting the formation of phase-separated condensates of SRSF1, which are preferentially recognized by pol II. During hypoxia, MALAT1 regulates spatially organized AS by establishing a threshold SRSF1 concentration near NSs, potentially by forming condensates, critical for pol II-mediated recruitment of SRSF1 to pre-mRNAs.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.