Artículos de revistas
Identical sequence patterns in the ends of exons and introns of human protein-coding genes
Fecha
2012-02Registro en:
COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY, OXFORD, v. 36, n. 1, pp. 55-61, FEB, 2012
1476-9271
10.1016/j.compbiolchem.2012.01.002
Autor
Tavares, Raphael
Renaud, Gabriel
Oliveira, Paulo Sergio Lopes
Ferreira, Carlos G.
Dias-Neto, Emmanuel
Passetti, Fabio
Institución
Resumen
Intron splicing is one of the most important steps involved in the maturation process of a pre-mRNA. Although the sequence profiles around the splice sites have been studied extensively, the levels of sequence identity between the exonic sequences preceding the donor sites and the intronic sequences preceding the acceptor sites has not been examined as thoroughly. In this study we investigated identity patterns between the last 15 nucleotides of the exonic sequence preceding the 5' splice site and the intronic sequence preceding the 3' splice site in a set of human protein-coding genes that do not exhibit intron retention. We found that almost 60% of consecutive exons and introns in human protein-coding genes share at least two identical nucleotides at their 3' ends and, on average, the sequence identity length is 2.47 nucleotides. Based on our findings we conclude that the 3' ends of exons and introns tend to have longer identical sequences within a gene than when being taken from different genes. Our results hold even if the pairs are non-consecutive in the transcription order. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.