Targeting natural splicing plasticity of APOBEC3B restricts its expression and mutagenic activity

2021
APOBEC3A (A3A) and APOBEC3B (A3B) enzymes drive APOBEC-mediated mutagenesis. Identification of factors affecting the activity of these enzymes could help modulate mutagenesis and associated clinical outcomes. Here, we show that canonical and alternatively spliced A3A and A3B isoforms produce corresponding mutagenic and non-mutagenic enzymes. Increased expression of the mutagenic A3B isoform predicted shorter progression-free survival in bladder cancer. We demonstrate that the production of mutagenic vs. non-mutagenic A3B protein isoforms was considerably affected by inclusion/skipping of exon 5 in A3B. Furthermore, exon 5 skipping, resulting in lower levels of mutagenic A3B enzyme, could be increased in vitro. Specifically, we showed the effects of treatment with an SF3B1 inhibitor affecting spliceosome interaction with a branch point site in intron 4, or with splice-switching oligonucleotides targeting exon 5 of A3B. Our results underscore the clinical role of A3B and implicate alternative splicing of A3B as a mechanism that could be targeted to restrict APOBEC-mediated mutagenesis. A. Rouf Banday et al. report targeting alternative splicing of APOBEC3B as a strategy to modulate APOBEC-mediated mutagenesis in cancers. Higher expression of the mutagenic APOBEC3B isoform predicted shorter progression-free survival in bladder cancer patients. Expression of this mutagenic isoform could be decreased by inducing skipping of APOBEC3B exon 5 in cells treated with SF3B1 inhibitor or splice-switching oligos.
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