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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Regulation of the expression of proto-oncogene c-src by alternative RNA splicing in chicken skeletal muscle.

Expression of the c-src locus in skeletal muscle of the chicken was found to be different from other tissues. A 4 kilobases (kb) cellular src (c-src) mRNA, which most likely codes for pp60c-src, is expressed in various chicken tissues examined, and most of its approximately 2.2 kb non-coding sequences are present at the 3' end of the RNA molecule. Whereas the 4 kb RNA is also expressed in embryonic chicken muscle, it disappears shortly before hatching and is replaced by a smaller-sized class of c-src mRNAs of 2.8 to 3.3 kb. The transition of expression from the 4 kb to the 2.8-3.3 kb RNA in skeletal muscle occurs shortly before hatching of the chicken and persists into adulthood. The two classes of the c-src mRNA share sequences both within the 5' coding and the 3' non-coding regions of pp60c-src, however, the 2.8 to 3.3 kb RNA lacks most of the kinase domain, but it contains upstream c-src sequences missing in the 4 kb RNA. The two classes of c-src mRNA most likely are generated by alternative splicing, and the smaller c-src RNA most likely codes for a product other than tyrosine protein kinase.[1]

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