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) have been associated with human cancers. How and why variants in ubiquitously expressed spliceosome proteins required for pre-mRNA splicing in all human cells result in tissue-restricted disease phenotypes is not clear. Additionally, why variants in different, yet interacting, proteins making up the same core spliceosome snRNP result in completely distinct disease outcomes - RP, craniofacial defects or cancer - is unclear. In this review, we define the roles of different U5 snRNP proteins in RP, craniofacial disorders and cancer, including how disease-associated genetic variants affect pre-mRNA splicing and the proposed disease mechanisms. We then propose potential hypotheses for how U5 snRNP variants cause tissue specificity resulting in the restricted and distinct human disorders.
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K Wood
WSP (Canada)
Megan A. Eadsforth
University of Manchester
William G. Newman
University of Manchester
Frontiers in Genetics
University of Manchester
Manchester Academic Health Science Centre
Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust
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Wood et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a07ec8cf1d046f8297358ba — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.636620