- Alternative splicing contributes to K+ channel diversity in the mammalian central nervous system.
Alternative splicing contributes to K+ channel diversity in the mammalian central nervous system.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1991-05-01)
C J Luneau, J B Williams, J Marshall, E S Levitan, C Oliva, J S Smith, J Antanavage, K Folander, R B Stein, R Swanson
PMID2023941
ABSTRACT
In an attempt to define the molecular basis of the functional diversity of K+ channels, we have isolated overlapping rat brain cDNAs that encoded a neuronal delayed rectifier K+ channel, K,4, that is structurally related to the Drosophila Shaw protein. Unlike previously characterized mammalian K+ channel genes, which each contain a single protein-coding exon, K,4 arises from alternative exon usage at a locus that also encodes another mammalian Shaw homolog, NGK2. Thus, the enormous diversity of K+ channels in mammals can be generated not just through gene duplication and divergence but also through alternative splicing of RNA.