RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 RBM-5 modulates U2AF large subunit-dependent alternative splicing in C. elegans JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 355388 DO 10.1101/355388 A1 Chuanman Zhou A1 Xiaoyang Gao A1 Surong Hu A1 Wenjing Gan A1 Xu Jing A1 Ma Yong-Chao A1 Ma Long YR 2018 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/06/25/355388.abstract AB A key step in pre-mRNA splicing is the recognition of 3’ splicing sites by the U2AF large and small subunits, a process regulated by numerous trans-acting splicing factors. How these trans-acting factors interact with U2AF in vivo is unclear. From a screen for suppressors of the temperature-sensitive (ts) lethality of the C. elegans U2AF large subunit gene uaf-1(n4588) mutants, we identified mutations in the RNA binding motif gene rbm-5, a homolog of the tumor suppressor RBM5. rbm-5 mutations can suppress uaf-1(n4588) ts-lethality by loss of function and neuronal expression of rbm-5 was sufficient to rescue the suppression. Transcriptome analyses indicate that uaf-1(n4588) affected the expression of numerous genes and rbm-5 mutations can partially reverse the abnormal gene expression to levels similar to that of wild type. Though rbm-5 mutations did not obviously affect alternative splicing per se, they can suppress or enhance, in a gene-specific manner, the altered splicing of genes in uaf-1(n4588) mutants. Specifically, the recognition of a weak 3’ splice site was more susceptible to the effect of rbm-5. Our findings provide novel in vivo evidence that RBM-5 can modulate UAF-1-dependent RNA splicing and suggest that RBM5 might interact with U2AF large subunit to affect tumor formation.Author summary RNA splicing is a critical regulatory step for eukaryotic gene expression and has been involved in the pathogenesis of multiple diseases. How RNA splicing factors interact in vivo to affect the splicing and expression of genes is unclear. In studying the temperature-sensitive lethal phenotypes of a mutation affecting the splicing factor U2AF large subunit gene uaf-1 in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, we isolated suppressive mutations in the rbm-5 gene, a homolog of the human tumor suppressor gene RBM5. rbm-5 is broadly expressed in neurons to enhance the lethality of the uaf-1 mutants. We found that the uaf-1 mutation causes aberrant expression of genes in numerous biological pathways, a large portion of which can be corrected by rbm-5 mutations. The abnormal splicing of multiple genes caused by the uaf-1 mutation is either corrected or enhanced by rbm-5 mutations in a gene-specific manner. We propose that RBM-5 interacts with UAF-1 to affect RNA splicing and the tumor suppressor function of RBM5 might involve U2AF-dependent RNA splicing.