Vertebrate genomes contain major (>99.5%) and minor (<0.5%) introns that are spliced by the major and minor spliceosomes, respectively. Major intron splicing follows the exon-definition model, whereby major spliceosome components first assemble across exons. However, since most genes with minor introns predominately consist of major introns, formation of exon-definition complexes in these genes would require interaction between the major and minor spliceosomes. Here, we report that minor spliceosome protein U11-59K binds to the major spliceosome U2AF complex, thereby supporting a model in which the minor spliceosome interacts with the major spliceosome across an exon to regulate the splicing of minor introns. Inhibition of minor spliceosome snRNAs and U11-59K disrupted exon-bridging interactions, leading to exon skipping by the major spliceosome. The resulting aberrant isoforms contained a premature stop codon, yet were not subjected to nonsense-mediated decay, but rather bound to polysomes. Importantly, we detected elevated levels of these alternatively spliced transcripts in individuals with minor spliceosome-related diseases such as Roifman syndrome, Lowry–Wood syndrome and early-onset cerebellar ataxia. In all, we report that the minor spliceosome informs splicing by the major spliceosome through exon-definition interactions and show that minor spliceosome inhibition results in aberrant alternative splicing in disease.
The developmental gene OTX2 is expressed by cerebellar granule cell precursors (GCPs), a cell population which undergoes massive expansion during the early postnatal period in response to sonic hedgehog (Shh). GCPs are thought to be at the origin of most medulloblastomas, a devastating paediatric cancer that arises in the developing cerebellum. OTX2 is overexpressed in all types of medulloblastomas, except in Shh-dependent type 2 medulloblastomas, although it has GCPs as cell-of-origin. This has led to the current view that OTX2 is not involved in tumorigenesis of this subgroup. How OTX2 might contribute to normal or tumoral GCP development in vivo remains unresolved. Here, we have investigated, for the first time, the physiological function of this factor in regulating proliferation and tumorigenesis in the developing mouse cerebellum. We first characterized Otx2-expressing cells in the early postnatal cerebellum and showed that they represent a unique subpopulation of highly proliferative GCPs. We next performed in vivo loss-of-function analysis to dissect out the role of Otx2 in these cells and identified a novel, Shh-independent, function for this factor in controlling postnatal GCP proliferation and cerebellum morphogenesis. Finally, we addressed the function of Otx2 in the context of type 2 medulloblastomas by directing Shh-dependent tumour formation in Otx2+ cells of the developing cerebellum and assessing the effects of Otx2 ablation in this context. We unravel an unexpected, mandatory function for Otx2 in sustaining cell proliferation and long-term maintenance of these tumours in vivo, therefore bringing unpredicted insight into the mechanisms of type 2 medulloblastoma subsistence. Together, these data pinpoint, for the first time, a crucial Shh-independent role for Otx2 in the control of proliferation of normal and tumoral granule cell precursors in vivo and make it an attractive candidate for targeted therapy in Shh-dependent medulloblastomas.
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