Pervasive noise in human splice site selection
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RNA splicing has historically been thought to be highly efficient and accurate, with little opportunity for deviation from regulated alternative splicing decisions. This dogma has been challenged by recent observations that suggest that biological noise may contribute substantially to transcriptome diversity. However, quantitative understanding of stochastic variations in splicing is challenging because these transcripts are likely subject to rapid degradation. Here, we use ultra-deep sequencing across RNA compartments to track splicing intermediates in human cells and see abundant cryptic splicing associated with genomic features that promote splicing noise. We observe pervasive usage of low-fidelity splice sites, likely due to stochasticity in recruitment or binding of the spliceosome. These sites are most likely degraded in the nucleus rather than targeted by translation-dependent degradation processes, suggesting widespread surveillance and rapid quality control of non-productive RNA transcripts. Our findings provide unprecedented insights into the propensity for error in RNA processing mechanisms and the regulation of alternative splice sites across a gene.