Gene expression is the process by which specific genes are activated to produce a required protein. The process is made up of the transcription and translation of DNA sequences.
Genes are DNA sequences that code for a protein. It is an unusual feature of most genes that the sequence of nucleotides that code for a protein is regularly interrupted by non-coding stretches of DNA:
the coding regions of a gene are called exons
the intervening non-coding regions are called introns
When genes are to be expressed by a cell they need to be copied and the non-coding parts edited out before they can be turned into protein. This process is called RNA splicing.
RNA splicing
First the gene is copied in full to produce a primary transcript. This includes both introns and exons.
The primary transcript of mRNA is then processed to:
remove the introns
join the remaining exons together
mature transcript of mRNA is formed.
Alternative RNA splicing
The benefit of RNA splicing is that one gene can produce many different proteins as a result of what segments are treated as introns and exons.