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Alternative Splicing of Conserved Exons is Frequently Species-specific in Human and Mouse

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Journal Trends Genet
Specialty Genetics
Date 2005 Jan 22
PMID 15661351
Citations 81
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Abstract

In this article, we provide evidence that a frequent source of diversity between mammalian transcripts occurs as a consequence of species-specific alternative splicing (AS) of conserved exons. Using a highly predictive computational method, we estimate that >11% of human and mouse cassette alternative exons undergo skipping in one species but constitutively splicing in the other. These species-specific AS events are predicted to modify conserved domains in proteins more frequently than other classes of AS events. The results thus provide evidence that species-specific AS of conserved exons constitutes an additional potential source of complexity and species-specific differences between mammals.

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