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Dive into the research topics where Lee-Hsueh Hung is active.

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Featured researches published by Lee-Hsueh Hung.


Cell Reports | 2015

Exon Circularization Requires Canonical Splice Signals

Stefan Starke; Isabelle Jost; Oliver Rossbach; Tim Schneider; Silke Schreiner; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Albrecht Bindereif

Circular RNAs (circRNAs), an abundant class of noncoding RNAs in higher eukaryotes, are generated from pre-mRNAs by circularization of adjacent exons. Using a set of 15 circRNAs, we demonstrated their cell-type-specific expression and circular versus linear processing in mammalian cells. Northern blot analysis combined with RNase H cleavage conclusively proved a circular configuration for two examples, LPAR1 and HIPK3. To address the circularization mechanism, we analyzed the sequence requirements using minigenes derived from natural circRNAs. Both canonical splice sites are required for circularization, although they vary in flexibility and potential use of cryptic sites. Surprisingly, we found that no specific circRNA exon sequence is necessary and that potential flanking intron structures can modulate circularization efficiency. In combination with splice inhibitor assays, our results argue that the canonical spliceosomal machinery functions in circRNA biogenesis, constituting an alternative splicing mode.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Intronic CA-repeat and CA-rich elements: a new class of regulators of mammalian alternative splicing

Jingyi Hui; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Monika Heiner; Silke Schreiner; Norma Neumüller; Gregor Reither; Stefan A. Haas; Albrecht Bindereif

We have recently identified an intronic polymorphic CA‐repeat region in the human endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) gene as an important determinant of the splicing efficiency, requiring specific binding of hnRNP L. Here, we analyzed the position requirements of this CA‐repeat element, which revealed its potential role in alternative splicing. In addition, we defined the RNA binding specificity of hnRNP L by SELEX: not only regular CA repeats are recognized with high affinity but also certain CA‐rich clusters. Therefore, we have systematically searched the human genome databases for CA‐repeat and CA‐rich elements associated with alternative 5′ splice sites (5′ss), followed by minigene transfection assays. Surprisingly, in several specific human genes that we tested, intronic CA RNA elements could function either as splicing enhancers or silencers, depending on their proximity to the alternative 5′ss. HnRNP L was detected specifically bound to these diverse CA elements. These data demonstrated that intronic CA sequences constitute novel and widespread regulatory elements of alternative splicing.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009

Auto- and Cross-Regulation of the hnRNP L Proteins by Alternative Splicing

Oliver Rossbach; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Silke Schreiner; Inna Grishina; Monika Heiner; Jingyi Hui; Albrecht Bindereif

ABSTRACT We recently characterized human hnRNP L as a global regulator of alternative splicing, binding to CA-repeat and CA-rich elements. Here we report that hnRNP L autoregulates its own expression on the level of alternative splicing. Intron 6 of the human hnRNP L gene contains a short exon that, if used, introduces a premature termination codon, resulting in nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). This “poison exon” is preceded by a highly conserved CA-rich cluster extending over 800 nucleotides that binds hnRNP L and functions as an unusually extended, intronic enhancer, promoting inclusion of the poison exon. As a result, excess hnRNP L activates NMD of its own mRNA, thereby creating a negative autoregulatory feedback loop and contributing to homeostasis of hnRNP L levels. We present experimental evidence for this mechanism, based on NMD inactivation, hnRNP L binding assays, and hnRNP L-dependent alternative splicing of heterologous constructs. In addition, we demonstrate that hnRNP L cross-regulates inclusion of an analogous poison exon in the hnRNP L-like pre-mRNA, which explains the reciprocal expression of the two closely related hnRNP L proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Network of coregulated spliceosome components revealed by zebrafish mutant in recycling factor p110

Nikolaus S. Trede; Jan Medenbach; Andrey Damianov; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Gerhard J. Weber; Barry H. Paw; Yi Zhou; Candace Hersey; A. Zapata; Matthew D. Keefe; Bruce Barut; Andrew Stuart; Tammisty Katz; Chris T. Amemiya; Leonard I. Zon; Albrecht Bindereif

The spliceosome cycle consists of assembly, catalysis, and recycling phases. Recycling of postspliceosomal U4 and U6 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) requires p110/SART3, a general splicing factor. In this article, we report that the zebrafish earl grey (egy) mutation maps in the p110 gene and results in a phenotype characterized by thymus hypoplasia, other organ-specific defects, and death by 7 to 8 days postfertilization. U4/U6 snRNPs were disrupted in egy mutant embryos, demonstrating the importance of p110 for U4/U6 snRNP recycling in vivo. Surprisingly, expression profiling of the egy mutant revealed an extensive network of coordinately up-regulated components of the spliceosome cycle, providing a mechanism compensating for the recycling defect. Together, our data demonstrate that a mutation in a general splicing factor can lead to distinct defects in organ development and cause disease.


Developmental Cell | 2014

RBM24 is a major regulator of muscle-specific alternative splicing.

Jiwen Yang; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Thomas Licht; Sawa Kostin; Mario Looso; Ekaterina E. Khrameeva; Albrecht Bindereif; André Schneider; Thomas Braun

Cell-type-specific splicing generates numerous alternatively spliced transcripts playing important roles for organ development and homeostasis, but only a few tissue-specific splicing factors have been identified. We found that RBM24 governs a large number of muscle-specific splicing events that are critically involved in cardiac and skeletal muscle development and disease. Targeted inactivation of RBM24 in mice disrupted cardiac development and impaired sarcomerogenesis in striated muscles. In vitro splicing assays revealed that recombinant RBM24 is sufficient to promote muscle-specific exon inclusion in nuclear extracts of nonmuscle cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate that binding of RBM24 to an intronic splicing enhancer (ISE) is essential and sufficient to overcome repression of exon inclusion by an exonic splicing silencer (ESS) containing PTB and hnRNP A1/A2 binding sites. Introduction of ESS and ISE converted a constitutive exon into an RMB24-dependent alternative exon. We reason that RBM24 is a major regulator of alternative splicing in striated muscles.


RNA Biology | 2014

Crosslinking-immunoprecipitation (iCLIP) analysis reveals global regulatory roles of hnRNP L

Oliver Rossbach; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Ekaterina E. Khrameeva; Silke Schreiner; Julian König; Tomaž Curk; Blaž Zupan; Jernej Ule; Mikhail S. Gelfand; Albrecht Bindereif

Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein L (hnRNP L) is a multifunctional RNA-binding protein that is involved in many different processes, such as regulation of transcription, translation, and RNA stability. We have previously characterized hnRNP L as a global regulator of alternative splicing, binding to CA-repeat, and CA-rich RNA elements. Interestingly, hnRNP L can both activate and repress splicing of alternative exons, but the precise mechanism of hnRNP L-mediated splicing regulation remained unclear. To analyze activities of hnRNP L on a genome-wide level, we performed individual-nucleotide resolution crosslinking-immunoprecipitation in combination with deep-sequencing (iCLIP-Seq). Sequence analysis of the iCLIP crosslink sites showed significant enrichment of C/A motifs, which perfectly agrees with the in vitro binding consensus obtained earlier by a SELEX approach, indicating that in vivo hnRNP L binding targets are mainly determined by the RNA-binding activity of the protein. Genome-wide mapping of hnRNP L binding revealed that the protein preferably binds to introns and 3′ UTR. Additionally, position-dependent splicing regulation by hnRNP L was demonstrated: The protein represses splicing when bound to intronic regions upstream of alternative exons, and in contrast, activates splicing when bound to the downstream intron. These findings shed light on the longstanding question of differential hnRNP L-mediated splicing regulation. Finally, regarding 3′ UTR binding, hnRNP L binding preferentially overlaps with predicted microRNA target sites, indicating global competition between hnRNP L and microRNA binding. Translational regulation by hnRNP L was validated for a subset of predicted target 3′UTRs.


The EMBO Journal | 2011

RNA‐Seq analysis in mutant zebrafish reveals role of U1C protein in alternative splicing regulation

Tanja Rösel; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Jan Medenbach; Katrin Donde; Stefan Starke; Vladimir Benes; Gunnar Rätsch; Albrecht Bindereif

Precise 5′ splice‐site recognition is essential for both constitutive and regulated pre‐mRNA splicing. The U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle (snRNP)‐specific protein U1C is involved in this first step of spliceosome assembly and important for stabilizing early splicing complexes. We used an embryonically lethal U1C mutant zebrafish, hi1371, to investigate the potential genomewide role of U1C for splicing regulation. U1C mutant embryos contain overall stable, but U1C‐deficient U1 snRNPs. Surprisingly, genomewide RNA‐Seq analysis of mutant versus wild‐type embryos revealed a large set of specific target genes that changed their alternative splicing patterns in the absence of U1C. Injection of ZfU1C cRNA into mutant embryos and in vivo splicing experiments in HeLa cells after siRNA‐mediated U1C knockdown confirmed the U1C dependency and specificity, as well as the functional conservation of the effects observed. In addition, sequence motif analysis of the U1C‐dependent 5′ splice sites uncovered an association with downstream intronic U‐rich elements. In sum, our findings provide evidence for a new role of a general snRNP protein, U1C, as a mediator of alternative splicing regulation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

HnRNP L and L-like cooperate in multiple-exon regulation of CD45 alternative splicing

Marco Preußner; Silke Schreiner; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Martina Porstner; Hans-Martin Jäck; Vladimir Benes; Gunnar Rätsch; Albrecht Bindereif

CD45 encodes a trans-membrane protein-tyrosine phosphatase expressed in diverse cells of the immune system. By combinatorial use of three variable exons 4–6, isoforms are generated that differ in their extracellular domain, thereby modulating phosphatase activity and immune response. Alternative splicing of these CD45 exons involves two heterogeneous ribonucleoproteins, hnRNP L and its cell-type specific paralog hnRNP L-like (LL). To address the complex combinatorial splicing of exons 4–6, we investigated hnRNP L/LL protein expression in human B-cells in relation to CD45 splicing patterns, applying RNA-Seq. In addition, mutational and RNA-binding analyses were carried out in HeLa cells. We conclude that hnRNP LL functions as the major CD45 splicing repressor, with two CA elements in exon 6 as its primary target. In exon 4, one element is targeted by both hnRNP L and LL. In contrast, exon 5 was never repressed on its own and only co-regulated with exons 4 and 6. Stable L/LL interaction requires CD45 RNA, specifically exons 4 and 6. We propose a novel model of combinatorial alternative splicing: HnRNP L and LL cooperate on the CD45 pre-mRNA, bridging exons 4 and 6 and looping out exon 5, thereby achieving full repression of the three variable exons.


Scientific Reports | 2016

CircRNA-protein complexes: IMP3 protein component defines subfamily of circRNPs

Tim Schneider; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Silke Schreiner; Stefan Starke; Heinrich Eckhof; Oliver Rossbach; Stefan Reich; Jan Medenbach; Albrecht Bindereif

Circular RNAs (circRNAs) constitute a new class of noncoding RNAs in higher eukaryotes generated from pre-mRNAs by alternative splicing. Here we investigated in mammalian cells the association of circRNAs with proteins. Using glycerol gradient centrifugation, we characterized in cell lysates circRNA-protein complexes (circRNPs) of distinct sizes. By polysome-gradient fractionation we found no evidence for efficient translation of a set of abundant circRNAs in HeLa cells. To identify circRNPs with a specific protein component, we focused on IMP3 (IGF2BP3, insulin-like growth factor 2 binding protein 3), a known tumor marker and RNA-binding protein. Combining RNA-seq analysis of IMP3-co-immunoprecipitated RNA and filtering for circular-junction reads identified a set of IMP3-associated circRNAs, which were validated and characterized. In sum, our data suggest that specific circRNP families exist defined by a common protein component. In addition, this provides a general approach to identify circRNPs with a given protein component.


RNA Biology | 2010

HnRNP L-mediated regulation of mammalian alternative splicing by interference with splice site recognition

Monika Heiner; Jingyi Hui; Silke Schreiner; Lee-Hsueh Hung; Albrecht Bindereif

Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) L can regulate alternative mRNA splicing in diverse ways, binding to exonic or intronic sites and acting as either an activator or repressor. To investigate the mechanistic basis of hnRNP L-regulated alternative splicing, we focus here on two specific cases of hnRNP L-dependent splice site recognition. First, in the case of TJP1 our microarray data had suggested that exon 20 inclusion is regulated by hnRNP L as a repressor. Here we demonstrate by mutational analysis that exon skipping is mediated by a short silencer sequence consisting of three hnRNP L high-score binding motifs located upstream of the 3’ splice site of the regulated exon. UV crosslinking and immunoprecipitation experiments showed that hnRNP L binding interferes with 3’ splice site recognition by U2AF65. Second, SLC2A2 contains a CA-repeat sequence close to the 5’ splice site of the regulated exon 4. Using psoralen crosslinking, we demonstrate that hnRNP L represses splicing by preventing 5’ splice site recognition of the U1 snRNP. In sum, our data provide new insights into the mechanisms of how hnRNP L - bound to intronic sites - regulates exon recognition.

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Monika Heiner

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Jingyi Hui

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jan Medenbach

University of Regensburg

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Vladimir Benes

European Bioinformatics Institute

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