The serotonin (5-HT) 5-HT7 receptor subtype is thought to mediate a number of physiological effects in mammalian brain and periphery. Previous studies suggested that alternative splicing might contribute to 5-HT7 receptor diversity as well. We now report that alternative splicing in human and rat tissues produces four 5-HT7 receptor isoforms that differ in their predicted C-terminal intracellular tails. Human and rat partial 5-HT7 cDNAs and intronic sequences were identified and compared. In rat tissues, three 5-HT7 isoforms, here called 5~HT7iai,5 HT7(b), and 5-HT7101, are found. Rat 5HT71a1 [448-amino acid (aa)] and 5-HT7(b) (435-aa) forms arise from alternative splice donor sites. A third new isoform found in rat, 5-HTJ(C) (470-aa), results from a retained exon cassette. Three 5-HT7 mRNA isoforms were also identified in human tissues, where only one isoform was previously described. Two human isoforms represent 5-HT71~1and 5-HT7(b) forms (445-and 432-aa), but the third form does not correspond to 5-HT7101. Instead, it constitutes a distinct isoform, 5-HT7(d) (479-aa), resulting from retention of a separate exon cassette. 5-HT7(d) transcripts are not present in rat because the 5-HT71~1-specifyingexon is absent from the rat 5-HT7 gene. A frame-shifting homologue of the rat 5-HT71~1-specifyingexon is present in the human gene but is not used in the human tissues examined. Tissue-specific splicing differences are present in human between brain and spleen. These studies suggest that alternative splicing may contribute to diversity of 5-HT7 receptor action and that the human and rat repertoires of 5-HT7 splice variants are substantially different.
Stepwise and regionally controlled resolution of sister chromatid cohesion is thought to be crucial for faithful chromosome segregation during meiotic divisions. In yeast, the meiosis-specific alpha-kleisin subunit of the cohesin complex, Rec8, is protected from cleavage by separase but only during meiosis I and specifically within the pericentromeric region. While the Drosophila genome does not contain an obvious Rec8 orthologue, as other animal and plant genomes, it includes c(2)M, which encodes a distant alpha-kleisin family member involved in female meiosis. C(2)M associates in vivo with the Smc3 cohesin subunit, as previously shown for yeast Rec8. In contrast to Rec8, however, C(2)M accumulates predominantly after the pre-meiotic S-phase. Moreover, after association with the synaptonemal complex, it disappears again and cannot be detected on meiotic chromosomes by metaphase I. C(2)M cleavage fragments are not observed during completion of the meiotic divisions, and mutations within putative separase cleavage sites do not interfere with meiotic chromosome segregation. Therefore, C(2)M appears to function within the synaptonemal complex during prophase I but possibly not thereafter. This suggests that C(2)M may not confer sister chromatid cohesion needed for meiosis I and II chromosome segregation.
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