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The conserved ubiquitin-like protein Hub1 plays a critical role in splicing in human cells

Authors :
Grzegorz M. Popowicz
Kaja Kowalska
Stefan Jentsch
Shravan Kumar Mishra
Tad A. Holak
Tim Ammon
Source :
Journal of Molecular Cell Biology, JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Different from canonical ubiquitin-like proteins, Hub 1 does not form covalent conjugates with substrates but binds proteins non- covalently. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Hub 1 associates with spliceosomes and mediates alternative splicing of SRC 1 , without affecting pre-mRNA splicing generally. Human Hub 1 is highly similar to its yeast homolog, but its cellular function remains largely unexplored. Here, we show that human Hub 1 binds to the spliceosomal protein Snu 66 as in yeast; however, unlike its S. cerevisiae homolog, human Hub 1 is essential for viability. Prolonged in vivo depletion of human Hub 1 leads to various cellular defects, including splicing speckle abnormalities, partial nuclear retention of mRNAs, mitotic catastrophe, and consequently cell death by apoptosis. Early consequences of Hub 1 depletion are severe splicing defects, however, only for specific splice sites leading to exon skipping and intron retention. Thus, the ubiquitin-like protein Hub 1 is not a canonical spliceosomal factor needed generally for splicing, but rather a modulator of spliceosome performance and facilitator of alternative splicing.

Details

ISSN :
17594685
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of molecular cell biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a20a0831db1b304d5ab26e0bcbdc00d