Polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTB) is an RNA-binding
protein that regulates splicing by repressing specific
splicing events. It also has roles in 3′-end processing,
internal initiation of translation, and RNA localization.
PTB exists in three alternatively spliced isoforms, PTB1,
PTB2, and PTB4, which differ by the insertion of 19 or
26 amino acids, respectively, between the second and third
RNA recognition motif domains. Here we show that the PTB
isoforms have distinct activities upon α-tropomyosin
(TM) alternative splicing. PTB1 reduced the repression
of TM exon 3 in transfected smooth muscle cells, whereas
PTB4 enhanced TM exon 3 skipping in vivo and in vitro.
PTB2 had an intermediate effect. The PTB4 > PTB2 >
PTB1 repressive hierarchy was observed in all in vivo and
in vitro assays with TM, but the isoforms were equally
active in inducing skipping of α-actinin exons and
showed the opposite hierarchy of activity when tested for
activation of IRES-driven translation. These findings establish
that the ratio of PTB isoforms could form part of a cellular
code that in turn controls the splicing of various other
pre-mRNAs.