Molecular Cell
Volume 55, Issue 4, 21 August 2014, Pages 592-603
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Article
Rbfox2-Coordinated Alternative Splicing of Mef2d and Rock2 Controls Myoblast Fusion during Myogenesis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2014.06.035Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Rbfox2, but not Rbfox1, is required for skeletal muscle differentiation

  • Rbfox2 regulates 30% splicing transitions associated with muscle differentiation

  • Rbfox2 controls myoblast fusion by regulating splicing of Mef2d and Rock2

  • Rock2 C-terminal alternative exons promote interactions with N terminus

Summary

Alternative splicing plays important regulatory roles during periods of physiological change. During development, a large number of genes coordinately express protein isoform transitions regulated by alternative splicing; however, the mechanisms that coordinate splicing and the functional integration of the resultant tissue-specific protein isoforms are typically unknown. Here we show that the conserved Rbfox2 RNA binding protein regulates 30% of the splicing transitions observed during myogenesis and is required for the specific step of myoblast fusion. Integration of Rbfox2-dependent splicing outcomes from RNA-seq with Rbfox2 iCLIP data identified Mef2d and Rock2 as Rbfox2 splicing targets. Restored activities of Mef2d and Rock2 rescued myoblast fusion in Rbfox2-depleted cultures, demonstrating functional cooperation of protein isoforms generated by coordinated alterative splicing. The results demonstrate that coordinated alternative splicing by a single RNA binding protein modulates transcription (Mef2d) and cell signaling (Rock2) programs to drive tissue-specific functions (cell fusion) to promote a developmental transition.

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Present address: Departments of Biochemistry and Medical Biochemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA