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 Regulation of alternative splicing by reversible protein phosphorylation Stamm SJ Biol Chem  2008[Jan]; 283 (3): 1223-7The vast majority of human protein-coding genes are subject to alternative  splicing, which allows the generation of more than one protein isoform from a  single gene. Cells can change alternative splicing patterns in response to a  signal, which creates protein variants with different biological properties. The  selection of alternative splice sites is governed by the dynamic formation of  protein complexes on the processed pre-mRNA. A unique set of these splicing  regulatory proteins assembles on different pre-mRNAs, generating a "splicing" or  "messenger ribonucleoprotein code" that determines exon recognition. By  influencing protein/protein and protein/RNA interactions, reversible protein  phosphorylation modulates the assembly of regulatory proteins on pre-mRNA and  therefore contributes to the splicing code. Studies of the serine/arginine-rich  protein class of regulators identified different kinases and protein phosphatase  1 as the molecules that control reversible phosphorylation, which controls not  only splice site selection, but also the localization of serine/arginine-rich  proteins and mRNA export. The involvement of protein phosphatase 1 explains why  second messengers like cAMP and ceramide that control the activity of this  phosphatase influence alternative splicing. The emerging mechanistic links  between splicing regulatory proteins and known signal transduction pathways now  allow in detail the understanding how cellular signals modulate gene expression  by influencing alternative splicing. This knowledge can be applied to human  diseases that are caused by the selection of wrong splice sites.|Alternative Splicing/*genetics[MESH]|Animals[MESH]|Disease[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Phosphorylation[MESH]|Proteins/*metabolism[MESH]|RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional[MESH]|RNA Splice Sites/genetics[MESH]
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