Decoding RAP1 ’s Role in Yeast mRNA Splicing

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Abstract

Messenger RNA (mRNA) splicing is a fundamental and tightly regulated process in eukaryotes, where the spliceosome removes non-coding sequences from pre-mRNA to produce mature mRNA for protein translation. Alternative splicing enables the generation of multiple RNA isoforms and protein products from a single gene, regulating both isoform diversity and abundance. While splicing is widespread in eukaryotes, only ∼3% of genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergo splicing, with most containing a single intron. However, intron-containing genes, primarily ribosomal protein genes, are highly expressed and constitute about one-third of the total mRNA pool. These genes are transcriptionally regulated by Repressor Activator Protein 1 ( RAP1 ), prompting us to investigate whether RAP1 influences mRNA splicing. Using RNA sequencing, we identified a novel role for RAP1 in alternative splicing, particularly in intron retention (IR) while minor effects were observed on alternative 3’ and 5’ splice site usage. Many IR-containing transcripts introduced premature termination codons, likely leading to degradation via nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). Consistent with previous literature, genes with predicted NMD in our study also had reduced overall expression levels suggesting that RAP1 plays an important role in this understudied mechanism of gene expression regulation.

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