Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.

Most eukaryotic messenger RNAs have the sequence AAUAAA 11-30 nucleotides from the 3'-terminal poly(A) tract. Since this is the only significant sequence homology in the 3' non-coding region it has been suggested that it may be a recognition site for enzymes involved in polyadenylation and...

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Main Authors: Higgs, D, Goodbourn, SE, Lamb, J, Clegg, J, Weatherall, D, Proudfoot, N
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1983
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author Higgs, D
Goodbourn, SE
Lamb, J
Clegg, J
Weatherall, D
Proudfoot, N
author_facet Higgs, D
Goodbourn, SE
Lamb, J
Clegg, J
Weatherall, D
Proudfoot, N
author_sort Higgs, D
collection OXFORD
description Most eukaryotic messenger RNAs have the sequence AAUAAA 11-30 nucleotides from the 3'-terminal poly(A) tract. Since this is the only significant sequence homology in the 3' non-coding region it has been suggested that it may be a recognition site for enzymes involved in polyadenylation and/or termination of polymerase II transcription. This idea is strengthened by observations on the effect of deletion mutations in or around the AATAAA sequence on polyadenylation of late simian virus 40 (SV40) mRNA; removal of this sequence prevents poly(A) addition. Naturally occurring variants of this hexanucleotide are rare and hitherto their functional significance has not been assessed. We have now identified a human alpha 2-globin gene which contains a single point mutation in this hexanucleotide (AATAAA leads to AATAAG). The paired alpha 1 gene on the same chromosome is completely inactivated by a frame-shift mutation. This unique combination has enabled the expression of the mutant alpha 2 gene to be studied in vivo where it has been found that the accumulated level of alpha 2-specific mRNA in erythroid cells is reduced. Furthermore, readthrough transcripts extending beyond the normal poly(A) addition site are detected in mRNA obtained from HeLa cells transfected with cloned DNA from the mutant alpha 2 gene, suggesting that the single nucleotide change in the AATAAA sequence is the cause of its abnormal expression.
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spelling oxford-uuid:f642af72-4ec8-4813-8807-a92e004fb72f2022-03-27T12:33:49ZAlpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:f642af72-4ec8-4813-8807-a92e004fb72fEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1983Higgs, DGoodbourn, SELamb, JClegg, JWeatherall, DProudfoot, NMost eukaryotic messenger RNAs have the sequence AAUAAA 11-30 nucleotides from the 3'-terminal poly(A) tract. Since this is the only significant sequence homology in the 3' non-coding region it has been suggested that it may be a recognition site for enzymes involved in polyadenylation and/or termination of polymerase II transcription. This idea is strengthened by observations on the effect of deletion mutations in or around the AATAAA sequence on polyadenylation of late simian virus 40 (SV40) mRNA; removal of this sequence prevents poly(A) addition. Naturally occurring variants of this hexanucleotide are rare and hitherto their functional significance has not been assessed. We have now identified a human alpha 2-globin gene which contains a single point mutation in this hexanucleotide (AATAAA leads to AATAAG). The paired alpha 1 gene on the same chromosome is completely inactivated by a frame-shift mutation. This unique combination has enabled the expression of the mutant alpha 2 gene to be studied in vivo where it has been found that the accumulated level of alpha 2-specific mRNA in erythroid cells is reduced. Furthermore, readthrough transcripts extending beyond the normal poly(A) addition site are detected in mRNA obtained from HeLa cells transfected with cloned DNA from the mutant alpha 2 gene, suggesting that the single nucleotide change in the AATAAA sequence is the cause of its abnormal expression.
spellingShingle Higgs, D
Goodbourn, SE
Lamb, J
Clegg, J
Weatherall, D
Proudfoot, N
Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.
title Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.
title_full Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.
title_fullStr Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.
title_full_unstemmed Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.
title_short Alpha-thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation.
title_sort alpha thalassaemia caused by a polyadenylation signal mutation
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