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1.
The stereochemical course of the first step of pre-mRNA splicing.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
We have determined the effects on splicing of sulfur substitution of the non-bridging oxygens in the phosphodiester bond at the 5' splice site of a pre-mRNA intron. Pre-mRNAs containing stereochemically pure Rp and Sp phosphorothioate isomers were produced by ligation of a chemically synthesized modified RNA oligonucleotide to enzymatically synthesized RAs. When these modified pre-mRNA substrates were tested for in vitro splicing activity in a HeLa cell nuclear extract system, the RNA with the Rp diastereomeric phosphorothioate was not spliced while the Sp diastereomeric RNA spliced readily. The sulfur-containing branched trinucleotide was purified from the splicing reaction of the Sp RNA and analyzed by cleavage with a stereospecific nuclease. The results showed that the Sp phosphorothioate was inverted during the splicing reaction to the Rp configuration; a finding previously obtained for a Group I self-splicing RNA. This inversion of configuration is consistent with a transesterification mechanism for pre-mRNA splicing. The lack of splicing of the Rp modified RNA also suggests that the pro-Rp oxygen at the 5' splice site is involved in a critical chemical contact in the splicing mechanism. Additionally, we have found that the HeLa cell RNA debranching enzyme is inactive on branches containing an Rp phosphorothioate.  相似文献   

2.
3.
4.
The two transesterification reactions catalyzed by self-splicing group II introns take place in either two active sites or two conformations of a single active site involving rearrangements of the positions of the reacting groups. We have investigated the effects on the rates of the chemical steps of the two reactions due to sulfur substitution of nonbridging oxygens at both the 5' and 3' splice sites as well as the deoxyribose substitution of the ribose 2' hydroxyl group at the 5' splice site. The data suggest that the two active sites differ in their interactions with several of these groups. Specifically, sulfur substitution of the pro-Sp nonbridging oxygen at the 5' splice site reduces the chemical rate of the step one branching reaction by at least 250-fold, whereas substitution of the pro-Sp oxygen at the 3' splice site has only a 4.5-fold effect on the chemical rate of step two. Previous work demonstrated that the Rp phosphorothioate substitutions at both the 5' and 3' splice sites reduced the rate of both steps of splicing to an undetectable level. These results suggest that either two distinct active sites catalyze the two steps or that more significant alterations must be made in a single bifunctional active site to accommodate the two different reactions.  相似文献   

5.
The RNA-catalysed self-splicing reaction of group II intron RNA is assumed to proceed by two consecutive transesterification steps, accompanied by lariat formation. This is effectively analogous to the small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP)-mediated nuclear pre-mRNA splicing process. Upon excision from pre-RNA, a group II lariat intervening sequence (IVS) has the capacity to re-integrate into its cognate exons, reconstituting the original pre-RNA. The process of reverse self-splicing is presumed to be a true reversion of both transesterification steps used in forward splicing. To investigate the fate of the esterified phosphate groups in splicing we assayed various exon substrates (5'E-*p3'E) containing a unique 32P-labelled phosphodiester at the ligation junction. In combined studies of alternating reverse and forward splicing we have demonstrated that the labelled phosphorus atom is displaced in conjunction with the 3' exon from the ligation junction to the 3' splice site and vice versa. Neither the nature of the 3' exon sequence nor its sequence composition acts as a prominent determinant for both substrate specificity and site-specific transesterification reactions catalysed by bI1 IVS. A cytosine ribonucleotide (pCp; pCOH) or even deoxyoligonucleotides could function as an efficient substitute for the authentic 3' exon in reverse and in forward splicing. Furthermore, the 3' exon can be single monophosphate group. Upon incubation of 3' phosphorylated 5' exon substrate (5'E-*p) with lariat IVS the 3'-terminal phosphate group is transferred in reverse and forward splicing like an authentic 3' exon, but with lower efficiency. In the absence of 3' exon nucleotides, it appears that substrate specificity is provided predominantly by the base-pairing interactions of the intronic exon binding site (EBS) sequences with the intron binding site (IBS) sequences in the 5' exon. These studies substantiate the predicted transesterification pathway in forward and reverse splicing and extend the catalytic repertoire of group II IVS in that they can act as a potential and sequence-specific transferase in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Novel RNA polymerization reaction catalyzed by a group I ribozyme.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
We have converted a bacterial tRNA precursor containing a 205 nt self-splicing group I intron into a RNA enzyme that catalyzes polymerization of an external RNA substrate. The reaction involves transesterification steps analogous to both the forward and reverse exon ligation steps of group I splicing; as such it depends entirely on 3' splice site reactions. The RNA substrate is a 20 nt analogue of the ligated exons (E1.E2), whose 3' end resembles the 3' terminus of the intron RNA enzyme (IVS). The splice junction of the substrate is attacked by the 3' end of the intron, then the molecule displaces the original 3' terminal guanosine so that the new 3' terminus is brought into the active site and used as the attacking nucleophile in the next reaction. Polymerization occurs via a series of covalent enzyme-linked intermediates of the structure IVS.(E2)n, where n = 1 to > or = 18. The 5' exon accumulates during the course of the reaction and can attack the covalent intermediates to produce elongation products of structure E1.(E2)n, regenerating the intron RNA enzyme in unchanged form. In this manner, the enzyme converts 20 nt oligoribonucleotides into polyribonucleotides up to at least 180 nt by 10 nt increments. These results have significant implications for the evolution of RNA-based self-replicating systems.  相似文献   

7.
New RNA-mediated reactions by yeast mitochondrial group I introns.   总被引:7,自引:1,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The group I self-splicing reaction is initiated by attack of a guanosine nucleotide at the 5' splice site of intron-containing precursor RNA. When precursor RNA containing a yeast mitochondrial group I intron is incubated in vitro under conditions of self-splicing, guanosine nucleotide attack can also occur at other positions: (i) the 3' splice site, resulting in formation of a 3' exon carrying an extra added guanosine nucleotide at its 5' end; (ii) the first phosphodiester bond in precursor RNA synthesized from the SP6 bacteriophage promoter, leading to substitution of the first 5'-guanosine by a guanosine nucleotide from the reaction mixture; (iii) the first phosphodiester bond in already excised intron RNA, resulting in exchange of the 5' terminal guanosine nucleotide for a guanosine nucleotide from the reaction mixture. An identical sequence motif (5'-GAA-3') occurs at the 3' splice site, the 5' end of SP6 precursor RNA and at the 5' end of excised intron RNA. We propose that the aberrant reactions can be explained by base-pairing of the GAA sequence to the Internal Guide Sequence. We suggest that these reactions are mediated by the same catalytic centre of the intron RNA that governs the normal splicing reactions.  相似文献   

8.
9.
U5 snRNA interacts with exon sequences at 5' and 3' splice sites.   总被引:55,自引:0,他引:55  
A J Newman  C Norman 《Cell》1992,68(4):743-754
U5 snRNA is an essential pre-mRNA splicing factor whose function remains enigmatic. Specific mutations in a conserved single-stranded loop sequence in yeast U5 snRNA can activate cleavage of G1----A mutant pre-mRNAs at aberrant 5' splice sites and facilitate processing of dead-end lariat intermediates to mRNA. Activation of aberrant 5' cleavage sites involves base pairing between U5 snRNA and nucleotides upstream of the cleavage site. Processing of dead-end lariat intermediates to mRNA correlates with base pairing between U5 and the first two bases in exon 2. The loop sequence in U5 snRNA may therefore by intimately involved in the transesterification reactions at 5' and 3' splice sites. This pattern of interactions is strikingly reminiscent of exon recognition events in group II self-splicing introns and is consistent with the notion that U5 snRNA may be related to a specific functional domain from a group II-like self-splicing ancestral intron.  相似文献   

10.
The Tetrahymena intron, after splicing from its flanking exons, can mediate its own circularization. This is followed by site-specific hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond formed during the circularization reaction. The structural components involved in recognition of this bond for hydrolysis have not been established. We have made base substitutions to the P9.0 pairing and at the 3'-terminal guanosine residue (G414) of the intron to investigate their effects on circle formation and reopening. We have found that disruption of either P9.0 pairing or binding of the terminal nucleotide result in the formation of a large circle, C-413:5E23 from precursor RNA molecules that have undergone hydrolysis at the 3' splice site. This circle is formed at the phosphodiester bond of the 5'-terminal guanosine residue of the upstream exon via nucleophilic attack by the 3'-terminal nucleotide of the intron. The large circle is novel since it can reopen eight bases downstream from the original circularization junction at a site resembling the normal 3' splice site, restoring a guanosine to the 3' terminus and re-establishing P9.0 pairing. The new 3' terminus of the intron is capable of recircularization at any of the three normal wild-type sites. We conclude that both P9.0 and the 3'-terminal guanosine residue are required for the selection of the phosphodiester bond hydrolysed during circle reopening.  相似文献   

11.
12.
S Teigelkamp  A J Newman    J D Beggs 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(11):2602-2612
Precursor RNAs containing 4-thiouridine at specific sites were used with UV-crosslinking to map the binding sites of the yeast protein splicing factor PRP8. PRP8 protein interacts with a region of at least eight exon nucleotides at the 5' splice site and a minimum of 13 exon nucleotides and part of the polypyrimidine tract in the 3' splice site region. Crosslinking of PRP8 to mutant and duplicated 3' splice sites indicated that the interaction is not sequence specific, nor does it depend on the splice site being functional. Binding of PRP8 to the 5' exon was established before step 1 and to the 3' splice site region after step 1 of splicing. These interactions place PRP8 close to the proposed catalytic core of the spliceosome during both transesterification reactions. To date, this represents the most extensive mapping of the binding site(s) of a splicing factor on the substrate RNA. We propose that the large binding sites of PRP8 stabilize the intrinsically weaker interactions of U5 snRNA with both exons at the splice sites for exon alignment by the U5 snRNP.  相似文献   

13.
The (Rp)- and (Sp)-diastereoisomers of thymidyl 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate) (1) were found to act as unusual substrates for acid deoxyribonuclease (DNase II). Instead of the expected thymidine 3'-phosphorothioate, the product resulting from the reaction of (Rp)-1 catalyzed by DNase II was identified as (Sp, Rp)-thymidyl (3'-5')thymidyl phosphorothioate 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate), while that from (Sp)-1 has been recognized as a 10:1 mixture of (Sp, Rp)-thymidyl (3'-5')thymidyl phosphorothioate 5'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate) and (Rp, Sp)-thymidyl (3'-5')-thymidyl phosphorothioate 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate), respectively. Both types of transnucleotidylations were found to occur with retention of configuration at phosphorus. Stereochemical results may be interpreted in terms of two step mechanisms involving the formation of the intermediate, covalent substrate enzyme complexes.  相似文献   

14.
Dème E  Nolte A  Jacquier A 《Biochemistry》1999,38(10):3157-3167
The splicing process catalyzed by group II intron ribozymes follows the same two-step pathway as nuclear pre-mRNA splicing. In vivo, the first splicing step of wild-type introns is a transesterification reaction giving rise to a branched lariat intron-3'-exon intermediate characteristic of this splicing mode. In the wild-type introns, the ribozyme core and the substrate intron-exon junctions are carried by the same precursor molecule, making it difficult to distinguish between RNA folding and catalysis under normal splicing reactions. To characterize the catalytic step of the first transesterification reaction, we studied the reversal of this reaction, reverse branching. In this reverse reaction, the excised lariat intron and the substrate 5'-exon can be preincubated and folded separately, allowing the measure of the catalytic rate of the reaction. To measure the catalytic rate of the second splicing step, purified lariat intron-3'-exon intermediate molecules were preincubated and folded prior to the addition of 5'-exon. Conditions could be found where chemistry appeared rate limiting for both catalytic steps. Study of the metal ion requirements under these conditions resulted in the unexpected finding that, for the intron studied, substitution of magnesium ions by manganese ions enhanced the rate of the first transesterification reaction by two orders of magnitude but had virtually no effect on the second transesterification reaction or the 5' splice site cleavage by hydrolysis. Finally, the catalytic rates measured under optimal conditions for both splicing steps were faster by three orders of magnitude in the branching pathway than in the hydrolytic pathway.  相似文献   

15.
PRP8 protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae interacts directly with pre-mRNA in spliceosomes, shown previously by UV-crosslinking. To analyse at which steps of splicing and with which precursor-derived RNA species the interaction(s) take place, UV-crosslinking was combined with PRP8-specific immunoprecipitation and the coprecipitated RNA species were analysed. Specific precipitation of intron-exon 2 and excised intron species was observed. PRP8 protein could be UV-crosslinked to pre-mRNA in PRP2-depleted spliceosomes stalled before initiation of the splicing reaction. Thus, the interaction of PRP8 protein with substrate RNA is established prior to the first transesterification reaction, is maintained during both steps of splicing and continues with the excised intron after completion of the splicing reaction. RNase T1 treatment of spliceosomes revealed that substrate RNA fragments of the 5' splice site region and the branchpoint-3' splice site region could be coimmunoprecipitated with PRP8 specific antibodies, indicating that these are potential sites of interaction for PRP8 protein with substrate RNA. Protection of the branch-point-3' splice site region was detected only after step 1 of splicing. The results allow a first glimpse at the pattern of PRP8 protein-RNA interactions during splicing and provide a fundamental basis for future analysis of these interactions.  相似文献   

16.
We have characterized the in vitro self-splicing of intron aI5 alpha containing precursor RNA from the yeast mitochondrial gene coding for cytochrome oxidase subunit I. This intron follows the rules for group I self-splicing introns and all the characteristic products have been identified. In addition we have detected abnormal RNA products with features that indicate that the self-splicing behaviour of this intron is more complex. Two intron circles are formed by use of a major and minor intron-internal site for circle closure. A cryptic 5'-splice site located in the 3' exon results in guanosine nucleotide mediated opening at a position 30 nt downstream of the normal 3' splice site. The reactions can all be explained on the basis of the "splice guide" model proposed by Davies et al (1982 Nature 300 719-724). Although the sequence motifs at cyclization and splice sites occur more often in this intron, only some of them are allowed to interact with the internal guide sequence, suggesting that both primary structure and spatial folding of the RNA are involved in formation of productive reaction sites.  相似文献   

17.
We have developed a quantitative substitution interference technique to examine the role of Pro-Rp oxygens in the phosphodiester backbone of RNA, using phosphorothioates as a structural probe. This approach is generally applicable to any reaction involving RNA in which the precursor and reaction products can be separated. We have applied the technique to identity structural requirements in the group I intron from Tetrahymena thermophila for catalysis of hydrolysis at the 3' splice site; 44 phosphate oxygens are important in 3' splice site hydrolysis. These include four or five oxygens previously observed to be important in exon ligation. Although phosphate oxygens having a functional significance can be found throughout the intron, the strongest phosphorothioate effects are closely associated with positions in the highly conserved intron core, which are likely to be involved in tertiary interactions, substrate recognition and catalysis.  相似文献   

18.
Group II introns can be folded into highly conserved secondary structures with six major substructures or domains. Domains 1 and 5 are known to play key roles in self-splicing, while the roles of domains 2, 3, 4, and 6 are less clear. A trans assay for domain 5 function has been developed which indicates that domain 5 has a binding site on the precursor RNA that is not predicted from any secondary structure element. In this study, the self-splicing group II intron 5 gamma of the coxI gene of yeast mitochondrial DNA was deleted for various intron domains, singly and in combinations. Those mutant introns were characterized for self-splicing reactions in vitro as a means of locating the domain 5 binding site. A single deletion of domain 2, 3, 4, or 6 does not block in vitro reactions at either splice junction, though the deletion of domain 6 reduces the fidelity of 3' splice site selection somewhat. Even the triple deletion lacking domains 2, 4, and 6 retains some self-splicing activity. The deletion of domains 2, 3, 4, and 6 blocks the reaction at the 3' splice junction but not at the 5' junction. From these results, we conclude that the binding site for domain 5 is within domain 1 and that the complex of 5' exon, domain 1, and domain 5 (plus short connecting sequences) constitutes the essential catalytic core of this intron.  相似文献   

19.
Precursor RNA transcribed from the yeast mitochondrial gene coding for the large ribosomal RNA contains a group I intron that can excise itself in vitro. Apart from group I specific sequence elements the intron also contains a gene encoding a DNA endonuclease involved in intron dispersal. A precursor RNA derivative from which this gene has been removed self-splices efficiently, but due to activation of cryptic opening sites located in the 5' exon, the 3' part of this exon is sometimes co-excised with the intron. Upon further reaction, this enlarged intron molecules give rise to interlocked circles, comprising small circles derived from 5' exon parts and large circles of the intron. Sequence comparison between cryptic opening sites and authentic splice sites reveals in most cases homology with the 3' exon part that is capable of interacting with the Internal Guide Sequence. The role of the IGS was further substantiated by replacing the cryptic opening sites with well defined sequences of authentic splice sites: one corresponding to the 3' splice site and its mutant derivatives, the other to a fragment containing the natural 5'-3' exon junction. Precursor RNAs derived from these constructs give rise to interlocked circles, and mutation studies confirm that the 3' exon nucleotides flanking a 3' splice site are essential for their formation. The results underline the crucial role of the IGS in interlocked circle formation which behaves similarly as in the normal self-splicing reactions. It has been proposed that the two short helices formed by basepairing of the IGS with the 5' and 3' exon can co-axially stack on top of each other forming a quasi continuous RNA double helix or pseudoknot. We present a model explaining how transesterification reactions of a mutant precursor RNA in such a pseudoknot can lead to interlocked circles. The experiments support the notion that a similar structure is also operative in splicing of wild type precursor RNA.  相似文献   

20.
The terminal intron (bI2) of the yeast mitochondrial cytochrome b gene is a group I intron capable of self-splicing in vitro at high concentrations of Mg2+. Excision of bI2 in vivo, however, requires a protein encoded by the nuclear gene CBP2. The CBP2 protein has been partially purified from wild-type yeast mitochondria and shown to promote splicing at physiological concentrations of Mg2+. The self-splicing and protein-dependent splicing reactions utilized a guanosine nucleoside cofactor, the hallmark of group I intron self-splicing reactions. Furthermore, mutations that abolished the autocatalytic activity of bI2 also blocked protein-dependent splicing. These results indicated that protein-dependent excision of bI2 is an RNA-catalyzed process involving the same two-step transesterification mechanism responsible for self-splicing of group I introns. We propose that the CBP2 protein binds to the bI2 precursor, thereby stabilizing the catalytically active structure of the RNA. The same or a similar RNA structure is probably induced by high concentrations of Mg2+ in the absence of protein. Binding of the CBP2 protein to the unspliced precursor was supported by the observation that the protein-dependent reaction was saturable by the wild-type precursor. Protein-dependent splicing was competitively inhibited by excised bI2 and by a splicing-defective precursor with a mutation in the 5' exon near the splice site but not by a splicing-defective precursor with a mutation in the core structure. Binding of the CBP2 protein to the precursor RNA had an effect on the 5' splice site helix, as evidenced by suppression of the interaction of an exogenous dinucleotide with the internal guide sequence.  相似文献   

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