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1.
Effect of 5'' splice site mutations on splicing of the preceding intron.   总被引:48,自引:21,他引:27       下载免费PDF全文
Three exon constructs containing identical intron and exon sequences were mutated at the 5' splice site beginning intron 2 and assayed for the effect of the mutation on splicing of the upstream intron in vitro. Alteration of two or six bases within the 5' splice site reduced removal of intron 1 at least 20-fold, as determined by quantitation of either spliced product or released lariat RNA. The prominent product was skip splicing of exon 1 to exon 3. Examination of complex formation indicated that mutation of the 5' splice site terminating exon 2 depressed the ability of precursor RNAs containing just the affected exon to direct assembly in vitro. These results suggest that mutation at the end of an internal exon inhibits the ability of the exon to be recognized by splicing factors. A comparison of the known vertebrate 5' splice site mutations in which the mutation resides at the end of an internal exon indicated that exon skipping is the preferred phenotype for this type of mutation, in agreement with the in vitro observation reported here. Inhibition of splicing by mutation at the distal and of the exon supports the suggestion that exons, rather than splice sites, are the recognition units for assembly of the spliceosome.  相似文献   

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Rose AB 《RNA (New York, N.Y.)》2002,8(11):1444-1453
To explore possible mechanisms of intron-mediated enhancement of gene expression, the features of PAT1 intron 1 required to elevate mRNA accumulation were systematically tested in transgenic Arabidopsis. This intron is remarkably resilient, retaining some ability to increase mRNA accumulation when splicing was prevented by mutation of 5' and 3' splice sites, branchpoint sequences, or when intron U-richness was reduced. Enhancement was abolished by simultaneously eliminating branchpoints and the 5' splice site, structures involved in the first two steps of spliceosome assembly. Although this suggests that the splicing machinery is required, intron splicing is clearly not enough to enhance mRNA accumulation. Five other introns were all efficiently spliced but varied widely in their ability to increase mRNA levels. Furthermore, PAT1 intron 1 was spliced but lost the ability to elevate mRNA accumulation when moved to the 3' UTR. These findings demonstrate that splicing per se is neither necessary nor sufficient for an intron to enhance mRNA accumulation, and suggest a mechanism that requires intron recognition by the splicing machinery but also involves nonconserved intron sequences.  相似文献   

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Formation of the Moloney murine leukemia virus envelope mRNA involves the removal of a 5,185-base pair-long intron. Deletion analysis of two Moloney murine leukemia virus-derived expression vectors revealed the existence of two short regions within the viral intron which are required for the efficient formation of the spliced RNA species. One region was present upstream from the 3' splice junction, extended at least 85 nucleotides beyond the splice site, and was not more than 165 nucleotides long. As yeast polymerase II introns, the Moloney murine leukemia virus intron contains the sequence 5'-TACTAAC-3' 15 nucleotides upstream from the 3' splice site. A second region located in the middle of the intron, within a 560-nucleotide-long sequence, was also essential for formation of the spliced RNA species. The efficient splicing of the env mRNA in the absence of expression of viral genes raises the possibility that similar mechanisms are used to remove introns of (some) cellular genes.  相似文献   

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Interactions at the 3' end of the intron initiate spliceosome assembly and splice site selection in vertebrate pre-mRNAs. Multiple factors, including U1 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs), are involved in initial recognition at the 3' end of the intron. Experiments were designed to test the possibility that U1 snRNP interaction at the 3' end of the intron during early assembly functions to recognize and define the downstream exon and its resident 5' splice site. Splicing precursor RNAs constructed to have elongated second exons lacking 5' splice sites were deficient in spliceosome assembly and splicing activity in vitro. Similar substrates including a 5' splice site at the end of exon 2 assembled and spliced normally as long as the second exon was less than 300 nucleotides long. U2 snRNPs were required for protection of the 5' splice site terminating exon 2, suggesting direct communication during early assembly between factors binding the 3' and 5' splice sites bordering an exon. We suggest that exons are recognized and defined as units during early assembly by binding of factors to the 3' end of the intron, followed by a search for a downstream 5' splice site. In this view, only the presence of both a 3' and a 5' splice site in the correct orientation and within 300 nucleotides of one another will stable exon complexes be formed. Concerted recognition of exons may help explain the 300-nucleotide-length maximum of vertebrate internal exons, the mechanism whereby the splicing machinery ignores cryptic sites within introns, the mechanism whereby exon skipping is normally avoided, and the phenotypes of 5' splice site mutations that inhibit splicing of neighboring introns.  相似文献   

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A yeast ACT1 intron in which both the first and last intron nucleotides are mutated, the /a-c/ intron, splices 10% as well as wild type. We selected for additional cis-acting mutations that improve the splicing of /a-c/ introns and recovered small deletions upstream of the 3' splice site. For example, deletion of nucleotides -9 and -10 upstream of the 3' splice site increased the splicing activity of the /a-c/ intron to 30% that of the wild-type ACT1 intron. To determine if the increased /a-c/ splicing was due to changes in intron spacing or sequence, we made mutations that mimicked the local sequence of the delta-9, -10 deletion without deleting any nucleotides. These mutants also increased /a-c/ splicing, indicating that the increased splicing activity was due to changes in intron sequence. The delta-9, -10 deletion was not allele specific to the /a-c/ intron, and improved the splicing efficiency of many mutant introns with step II splicing defects. To further define the sequences required for improved splicing of mutant introns, we randomized the region upstream of the ACT1 3' splice site. We found that almost all sequence alterations improved the splicing of the /a-c/ intron. We postulate that this sequence near the 3' end of the intron represses the splicing of mutant introns, perhaps by serving as the binding site for a negative splicing factor.  相似文献   

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B Ruskin  J M Greene  M R Green 《Cell》1985,41(3):833-844
The excised introns of pre-mRNAs and intron-containing splicing intermediates are in a lariat configuration in which the 5' end of the intron is linked by a 2'-5' phosphodiester bond (RNA branch) to a single adenosine residue near the 3' end of the intron. To determine the role of the specific sequence surrounding the RNA branch, we have mutated the branch point sequence of the human beta-globin IVS1. Pre-mRNAs lacking the authentic branch point sequence are accurately spliced in vitro; processing of the mutant pre-mRNAs generates RNA lariats due to the activation of cryptic branch points within IVS1. The cryptic branch points always occur at adenosine residues, but the sequences surrounding the branched nucleotide vary. Regardless of the type of mutation or the sequences remaining within IVS1, the cryptic branch points are 22 to 37 nucleotides upstream of the 3' splice site. These results suggest that RNA branch point selection is primarily based on a mechanism that measures the distance from the 3' splice site.  相似文献   

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Invertases are responsible for the breakdown of sucrose to fructose and glucose. In all but one plant invertase gene, the second exon is only 9 nt in length and encodes three amino acids of a five-amino-acid sequence that is highly conserved in all invertases of plant origin. Sequences responsible for normal splicing (inclusion) of exon 2 have been investigated in vivo using the potato invertase, invGF gene. The upstream intron 1 is required for inclusion whereas the downstream intron 2 is not. Mutations within intron 1 have identified two sequence elements that are needed for inclusion: a putative branchpoint sequence and an adjacent U-rich region. Both are recognized plant intron splicing signals. The branchpoint sequence lies further upstream from the 3' splice site of intron 1 than is normally seen in plant introns. All dicotyledonous plant invertase genes contain this arrangement of sequence elements: a distal branchpoint sequence and adjacent, downstream U-rich region. Intron 1 sequences upstream of the branchpoint and sequences in exons 1, 2, or 3 do not determine inclusion, suggesting that intron or exon splicing enhancer elements seen in vertebrate mini-exon systems are absent. In addition, mutation of the 3' and 5' splice sites flanking the mini-exon cause skipping of the mini-exon, suggesting that both splice sites are required. The branchpoint/U-rich sequence is able to promote splicing of mini-exons of 6, 3, and 1 nt in length and of a chicken cTNT mini-exon of 6 nt. These sequence elements therefore act as a splicing enhancer and appear to function via interactions between factors bound at the branchpoint/U-rich region and at the 5' splice site of intron 2, activating removal of this intron followed by removal of intron 1. This first example of splicing of a plant mini-exon to be analyzed demonstrates that particular arrangement of standard plant intron splicing signals can drive constitutive splicing of a mini-exon.  相似文献   

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Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) exonic splicing silencers (ESSs) inhibit production of certain spliced viral RNAs by repressing alternative splicing of the viral precursor RNA. Several HIV-1 ESSs interfere with spliceosome assembly by binding cellular hnRNP A/B proteins. Here, we have further characterized the mechanism of splicing repression using a representative HIV-1 hnRNP A/B-dependent ESS, ESSV, which regulates splicing at the vpr 3' splice site. We show that hnRNP A/B proteins bound to ESSV are necessary to inhibit E complex assembly by competing with the binding of U2AF65 to the polypyrimidine tracts of repressed 3' splice sites. We further show evidence suggesting that U1 snRNP binds the 5' splice site despite an almost complete block of splicing by ESSV. Possible splicing-independent functions of U1 snRNP-5' splice site interactions during virus replication are discussed.  相似文献   

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cis-acting sequences of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) RNA involved in control of the incomplete splicing that is part of the retroviral life cycle have been studied. The 5' and two alternative 3' splice sites, as well as negative regulator of splicing element in the intron, have been introduced into chimeric constructs, and their responsive roles in splicing inhibition have been evaluated by transient transfection experiments. Although the RSV 5' splice site was used efficiently in these assays, substrates containing either the RSV env or the RSV src 3' splice site were not spliced completely, resulting in 40 to 50% unspliced RNA. Addition of the negative regulator of splicing element to substrates containing RSV 3' splice sites resulted in greater inhibition of splicing (70 to 80% unspliced RNA), suggesting that the two elements function independently and additively. Deletion of sequences more than 70 nucleotides upstream of the src 3' splice site resulted in efficient splicing at this site, suggesting that inefficient usage is not inherent in this splice site but is instead due to to sequences upstream of it. Insertion of these upstream sequences into the intron of a heterologous pre-mRNA resulted in partial inhibition of its splicing. In addition, secondary structure interactions were predicted to occur between the src 3' splice site and the inhibitory sequences upstream of it. Thus, RSV splicing control involves both intronic sequences and 3' splice sites, with different mechanisms involved in the underutilization of the env and src splice acceptor sites.  相似文献   

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mRNAs R1 and R2 of the parvovirus minute virus of mice encode the two essential viral regulatory proteins NS1 and NS2. Both RNAs are spliced between map units 44 and 46 (nucleotides 2280 and 2399); R2 RNAs are additionally spliced upstream between map units 10 and 39 (nucleotides 514 and 1989), using a nonconsensus donor and poor 3' splice site. The relative accumulation of R1 and R2 is determined by alternative splicing: there is twice the steady-state accumulation of R2 relative to that of R1 throughout viral infection, though they are generated from the same promoter and have indistinguishable stabilities. Here we demonstrate that efficient excision of the large intron to generate R2 is dependent on at least the initial presence, in P4-generated pre-mRNAs, of sequences within the downstream small intron. This effect is orientation dependent and related to the size of the intervening exon. Prior splicing of the small intron is unnecessary. Excision of the large intron is enhanced by changing its donor site to consensus, but only in the presence of the small intron sequences. Excision of the large intron is also enhanced by improving the polypyrimidine tract within its 3' splice site; however, in contrast, this change renders excision of the large intron independent of the downstream small intron. We suggest that sequences within the small intron play a primary role in efficient excision of the upstream large intron, perhaps as the initial entry site(s) for an element(s) of the splicesome, which stabilizes the binding of required factors to the polypyrimidine tract within the 3' splice site of the large intron.  相似文献   

20.
The introns of Drosophila pre-mRNAs have been analysed for conserved internal sequence elements near the 3' intron boundary similar to the T-A-C-T-A-A-C in yeast introns and the C/T-T-A/G-A-C/T in introns of other organisms. Such conserved internal elements are the 3' splice signals recognized in intron splicing. In the lariat splicing mechanism, the G at the 5' end of an intron joins covalently to the last A of a 3' splice signal to form a branch point in a splicing intermediate. Analysis of 39 published sequences of Drosophila introns reveals that potential 3' splice signals with the consensus C/T-T-A/G-A-C/T are present in 18 cases. In 17 of the remaining cases signals are present which vary from this consensus just in the middle or last position. In Drosophila introns the 3' splice signal is usually located in a discrete region between 18 and 35 nucleotides upstream from the 3' splice point. We note that the Drosophila small nuclear U2-RNA has sequences complementary to C-T-G-A-T, one variant of the signal, and to C-A-G, one variant of the 3' terminus of an intron. We also note that the absence of any A-G between -3 and -19 from the 3' splice point may be an essential feature of a strong 3' boundary.  相似文献   

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