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Minigene

About: Minigene is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1839 publications have been published within this topic receiving 81908 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Traditional gene-by-gene investigations of alternative splicing mechanisms are now being complemented by global approaches that promise to reveal details of the nature and operation of cellular codes that are constituted by combinations of regulatory elements in pre-mRNA substrates and by cellular complements of splicing regulators, which together determine regulated splicing pathways.
Abstract: In violation of the 'one gene, one polypeptide' rule, alternative splicing allows individual genes to produce multiple protein isoforms - thereby playing a central part in generating complex proteomes. Alternative splicing also has a largely hidden function in quantitative gene control, by targeting RNAs for nonsense-mediated decay. Traditional gene-by-gene investigations of alternative splicing mechanisms are now being complemented by global approaches. These promise to reveal details of the nature and operation of cellular codes that are constituted by combinations of regulatory elements in pre-mRNA substrates and by cellular complements of splicing regulators, which together determine regulated splicing pathways.

1,334 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Human genes contain a dense array of diverse cis-acting elements that make up a code required for the expression of correctly spliced mRNAs, which contributes to disease severity and susceptibility by affecting splicing efficiency.
Abstract: Human genes contain a dense array of diverse cis-acting elements that make up a code required for the expression of correctly spliced mRNAs. Alternative splicing generates a highly dynamic human proteome through networks of coordinated splicing events. Cis- and trans-acting mutations that disrupt the splicing code or the machinery required for splicing and its regulation have roles in various diseases, and recent studies have provided new insights into the mechanisms by which these effects occur. An unexpectedly large fraction of exonic mutations exhibit a primary pathogenic effect on splicing. Furthermore, normal genetic variation significantly contributes to disease severity and susceptibility by affecting splicing efficiency.

1,000 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2008-RNA
TL;DR: The current state of knowledge of splicing cis-regulatory elements and their context-dependent effects on splicing are summarized, emphasizing recent global/genome-wide studies and open questions.
Abstract: Alternative splicing of pre-mRNAs is a major contributor to both proteomic diversity and control of gene expression levels. Splicing is tightly regulated in different tissues and developmental stages, and its disruption can lead to a wide range of human diseases. An important long-term goal in the splicing field is to determine a set of rules or ‘‘code’’ for splicing that will enable prediction of the splicing pattern of any primary transcript from its sequence. Outside of the core splice site motifs, the bulk of the information required for splicing is thought to be contained in exonic and intronic cis-regulatory elements that function by recruitment of sequence-specific RNA-binding protein factors that either activate or repress the use of adjacent splice sites. Here, we summarize the current state of knowledge of splicing cis-regulatory elements and their context-dependent effects on splicing, emphasizing recent global/genome-wide studies and open questions.

970 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
13 Aug 1993-Cell
TL;DR: An element near the 5' boundary of the chicken beta-globin domain that insulates a reporter gene from the activating effects of a nearby beta- globin locus control region (5'HS2) when assayed in the human erythroid cell line K562 is characterized.

940 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Some of the emerging rules that govern the highly context-dependent and combinatorial nature of alternative splicing regulation are described.
Abstract: Sequence-specific RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) bind to pre-mRNA to control alternative splicing, but it is not yet possible to read the 'splicing code' that dictates splicing regulation on the basis of genome sequence. Each alternative splicing event is controlled by multiple RBPs, the combined action of which creates a distribution of alternatively spliced products in a given cell type. As each cell type expresses a distinct array of RBPs, the interpretation of regulatory information on a given RNA target is exceedingly dependent on the cell type. RBPs also control each other's functions at many levels, including by mutual modulation of their binding activities on specific regulatory RNA elements. In this Review, we describe some of the emerging rules that govern the highly context-dependent and combinatorial nature of alternative splicing regulation.

820 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202388
2022137
202176
202065
201968
201860