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RNA Splicing Occurs in Nerve-Cell Dendrites
Penn Discovery May Provide Better Understanding of Memory,
Learning, and Diseases of Cognition
(Philadelphia, PA) - Researchers at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have discovered that nerve-cell
dendrites have the capacity to splice messenger RNA (pre-mRNA), a process
once believed to only take place in the nucleus of cells. By uncovering
this capability in dendrites, the investigators hope to relate this capacity
to memory and learning, as well as cognitive dysfunction. Senior author
James Eberwine, PhD, Professor of Pharmacology, and lead
authors Kevin Miyashiro, and Jason Glanzer, PhD,
both in Eberwine’s lab, report their findings in this week's early
online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Dendrites, which branch from the cell body of the neuron, play a key role
in the communication between cells of the nervous system, allowing for
many neurons to connect with each other to form a network. Dendrites detect
the electrical and chemical signals transmitted to the neuron by the axons
of other neurons. The synapse is the neuronal structure where this chemical
connection is formed, and investigators surmise that the synapse is where
learning and memory occur.
Researchers have long agreed that mRNA splicing takes place within the
cell nucleus. In the nucleus of a mammalian cell, a gene is copied into
mRNA, which possesses both exons (mature mRNA regions destined to code
for proteins) and introns (non-coding regions). mRNA splicing works by
cutting out introns and merging together the remaining exon pieces, resulting
in an mRNA capable of being translated into a specific protein.
The vast array of proteins within the human body arises in part from the
many ways that mRNAs can be spliced and reconnected. Specifically, splicing
removes pieces of intron and exon regions from the RNA, with the resulting
spliced RNA often being made into protein. Should the RNA have different
exons spliced in and out of it, then different proteins can be made from
this RNA. The Eberwine lab was successful in showing that splicing can
occur in dendrites because they have employed very sensitive technologies
developed in their lab, which permits the detection and quantification
of RNA splicing as well as the translated protein in single isolated dendrites.
"In addition to showing that mRNA splicing occurs in dendrites in
which we added mRNA, we also detected the resulting protein," notes
Eberwine. "Since the splicing machinery is present in dendrites,
one could speculate that if pre-mRNA is present naturally in the dendrite,
when activated, it may be spliced and translated, giving rise to many
different proteins."
Protein diversity is a key aspect to the complexity of the central nervous
system. Proteins are the workhorses of the cell and are generally responsible
for insuring that cells function properly. When proteins interact with
one another they can elicit specific physiological responses, including
the generation and maintenance of memories. Changing protein identity,
as can occur with splicing, can change the ability of the protein to interact
with other proteins and therefore potentially change such physiological
processes. With the dendrite being the initial site in the neuron where
learning is thought to occur, the ability to create a diversity of mRNAs,
through local splicing, and subsequent protein translation may permit
exquisitely sensitive control of these cellular functions.
“The regulation and timing of the expression of proteins is what
makes the central nervous system function," says Eberwine. The diversity
and redundancy of the nervous-system proteins may serve to help maintain
the system over a lifetime. However, failure in protein regulation or
proper expression in neurons may give rise to cognitive dysfunction. “Most
neurodegenerative and psychiatric illnesses exhibit dendrite dysfunction,
therefore, the inability to properly generate spliced RNAs in dendrites
or proteins may underlie aspects of these disease processes.”
By revealing the capacity of mRNA splicing in dendrites, the investigators
hope to develop an understanding of its role in cognition and dysfunction.
Eberwine and colleagues are now working to find an endogenous mRNA that
will undergo splicing within dendrites.
Co-authors in addition to Eberwine, Glanzer, and Miyashiro are Jai-Yoon
Sul, Lindy Barrett, Brian Belt, and Phillip Haydon, all from Penn. This
worked was funded by the National Institute on Aging and the National
Institute on Mental Health.
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