%0 Journal Article %A Misgana Idris %A Neville J Butcher %A Rodney F Minchin %T The MBNL/CELF Splicing Factors Regulate Cytosolic Sulfotransferase 4A1 protein expression During Cell Differentiation. %D 2019 %R 10.1124/dmd.118.085290 %J Drug Metabolism and Disposition %P dmd.118.085290 %X Sulfotransferase 4A1 (SULT4A1) is a sulfotransferase-like protein that is highly conserved between species. In human tissues, there are 2 transcripts, one that produces a full length protein and one that produces an unstable truncated protein. The second transcript, which includes a pseudo-exon between exons 6 and 7 (6p), is widely expressed while the first is more restricted. Differentiation of neuronal cells results in the removal of the pseudo-exon and subsequent SULT4A1 protein expression. Recent studies with SULT4A1 knockout mice showed that the protein is essential for normal development and that its absence leads to a severe neurological phenotype. Here, the regulation of SULT4A1 6p splicing was investigated during neuronal differentiation using SH-SY5Y cells, human induced pluripotent stem cells and mouse embryonic tissue. In all 3 models, pseudo-exon 6p was removed during differentiation, resulting in stable SULT4A1 protein expression. Using a minigene splicing assay, a region upstream of pseudo-exon 6p was identified that is essential for correct splicing of SULT4A1 mRNA. Within this region, there were binding motifs for 4 RNA processing factors (MBNL-1, MBNL-2, CELF-1 and CELF-2). Time-dependent changes in SULT4A1 protein and MBNL/CELF protein during differentiation supported their role in correctly splicing the SULT4A1 mRNA. Furthermore, ectopic expression of each factor produced efficient splicing in the minigene assay as well as correct splicing of the endogenous SULT4A1 mRNA. These results show that SULT4A1 mRNA is a target for MBNL/CELF-dependent splicing, which may be essential in producing stable, function SULT4A1. %U https://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/dmd/early/2019/01/03/dmd.118.085290.full.pdf