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1.
N K Tanner  T R Cech 《Biochemistry》1987,26(12):3330-3340
We have converted the intramolecular cyclization reaction of the self-splicing intervening sequence (IVS) ribonucleic acid (RNA) from Tetrahymena thermophila into an intermolecular guanosine addition reaction. This was accomplished by selectively removing the 3'-terminal nucleotide by oxidation and beta-elimination; the beta-eliminated IVS thereby is no longer capable of reacting with itself. However, under cyclization conditions, a free guanosine molecule can make a nucleophilic attack at the normal cyclization site. We have used this guanosine addition reaction as a model system for a Michaelis-Menten kinetic analysis of the guanosine binding site involved in cyclization. The results indicate that functional groups on the guanine that are used in a G-C Watson-Crick base pair are important for the cyclization reaction. This is the same result that was obtained for the guanosine binding site involved in splicing [Bass, B. L., & Cech, T. R. (1984) Nature (London) 308, 820-826]. Unlike splicing, however, certain additional nucleotides 5' to the guanosine moiety make significant binding contributions. We conclude that the guanosine binding site in cyclization is similar to, but not identical with, the guanosine binding site in splicing. The same binding interactions used in cyclization could help align the 3' splice site of the rRNA precursor for exon ligation. We also report that the phosphodiester bond at the cyclization site is susceptible to a pH-dependent hydrolysis reaction; the phosphodiester bond is somehow activated toward attack by the 3'hydroxyl of a guanosine molecule or by a hydroxyl ion.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
B L Bass  T R Cech 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4473-4477
The intervening sequence (IVS) of the Tetrahymena rRNA precursor catalyzes its own splicing. During splicing the 3'-hydroxyl of guanosine is ligated to the 5' terminus of the IVS. One catalytic strategy of the IVS RNA is to specifically bind its guanosine substrate. Deoxyguanosine (dG) and dideoxyguanosine (ddG) are found to be competitive inhibitors of self-splicing. Comparison of the kinetic parameters (Ki = 1.1 mM for dG; Ki = 5.4 mM for ddG; Km = 0.032 mM for guanosine) indicates that the ribose hydroxyls are necessary for optimal binding of guanosine to the RNA. dG is not a substrate for the reaction even at very high concentrations. Thus, in addition to aiding in binding, the 2'-hydroxyl is necessary for reaction of the 3'-hydroxyl. A second catalytic strategy of the IVS RNA is to enhance the reactivity of specific bonds. For example, the phosphodiester bond at the 3' splice site is extremely labile to hydrolysis. We find that dG and ddG, as well as 2'-O-methylguanosine and 3'-O-methylguanosine, reduce hydrolysis at the 3' splice site. These data are consistent with an RNA structure that brings the 5' and 3' splice sites proximal to the guanosine binding site.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Splice site recognition and catalysis of the transesterification reactions in the spliceosome are accompanied by a dynamic series of interactions involving conserved or invariant sequences in the spliceosomal snRNAs. We have used site-specific photoactivated crosslinking in yeast spliceosomes to monitor interactions between snRNAs and exon sequences near the 5' and 3' splice sites. The last nucleotide of the 5' exon can be crosslinked to an invariant loop sequence in U5 SnRNA before and after 5' splice site cleavage. The first nucleotide of the 3' exon can also be crosslinked to the same U5 loop sequence, but this contact is only detectable after the first transesterification. These results are in close agreement with earlier data from mammalian splicing extracts, and they are consistent with a model in which U5 snRNA aligns the 5' and 3' exons for the second transesterification. After the first catalytic step of splicing, the first nucleotide of the 3' exon can also crosslink to nt U23 in U2 snRNA. This is one of a cluster of residues in U2-U6 helix I implicated by mutational analysis in the second catalytic step of splicing. The crosslinking data suggest that these residues in U2-U6 helix I are in close proximity to the scissile phosphodiester bond at the 3' splice site prior to the second transesterification. These results constitute the first biochemical evidence for a direct interaction between the 3' splice site and U2 snRNA.  相似文献   

7.
An RNA molecule consisting of the 5' exon and intervening sequence (IVS) of Tetrahymena precursor rRNA was oxidized with sodium periodate to convert the ribose moiety of the 3' terminal guanosine into a dialdehyde form. The modified RNA undergoes a specific cleavage reaction at the 5' splice site, but has no apparent cyclization activity. This novel reaction mediated by the IVS RNA is pH dependent over the range 6.5-8.5 and leaves a 5' phosphate and a 3'-OH at the newly created termini. The dialdehyde form of monomer guanosine is also capable of causing a specific cleavage reaction at the 5' splice site although the nucleotide is not covalently attached to the IVS RNA in the final product. These and other findings described in this report suggest that the cis diol of the intact ribose moiety of guanosine is not an absolute requirement for the IVS-mediated reactions.  相似文献   

8.
F X Sullivan  T R Cech 《Cell》1985,42(2):639-648
The Tetrahymena rRNA intervening sequence (IVS) excises itself from the pre-rRNA and then mediates its own cyclization. We now find that certain di- and trinucleotides with free 3' hydroxyl groups reopen the circular IVS at the cyclization junction, producing a linear molecule with the oligonucleotide covalently attached to its 5' end. This linear molecule recyclizes with release of the added oligonucleotide. Thus the IVS RNA, like an enzyme, lowers the activation energy for both forward and reverse cleavage-ligation reactions. Certain combinations of pyrimidines are required for circle reopening. The most reactive oligonucleotide is UCU. This sequence resembles those preceding the major and minor cyclization sites in the linear IVS RNA (UUU and CCU) and the 5' splice site in the pre-rRNA (UCU). We propose that an oligopyrimidine binding site within the IVS binds the sequences upstream of each of these target sites for cleavage-ligation.  相似文献   

9.
10.
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   

11.
The intervening sequence (IVS) of the Tetrahymena thermophila ribosomal RNA precursor undergoes accurate self-splicing in vitro. The work presented here examines the requirement for Tetrahymena rRNA sequences in the 5' exon for the accuracy and efficiency of splicing. Three plasmids were constructed with nine, four and two nucleotides of the natural 5' exon sequence, followed by the IVS and 26 nucleotides of the Tetrahymena 3' exon. RNA was transcribed from these plasmids in vitro and tested for self-splicing activity. The efficiency of splicing, as measured by the production of ligated exons, is reduced as the natural 5' exon sequence is replaced with plasmid sequences. Accurate splicing persists even when only four nucleotides of the natural 5' exon sequence remain. When only two nucleotides of the natural exon remain, no ligated exons are observed. As the efficiency of the normal reaction diminishes, novel RNA species are produced in increasing amounts. The novel RNA species were examined and found to be products of aberrant reactions of the precursor RNA. Two of these aberrant reactions involve auto-addition of GTP to sites six nucleotides and 52 nucleotides downstream from the 3' splice site. The former site occurs just after the sequence GGU, and may indicate the existence of a GGU-binding site within the IVS RNA. The latter site follows the sequence CUCU, which is identical with the four nucleotides preceding the 5' splice site. This observation led to a model where where the CUCU sequence in the 3' exon acts as a cryptic 5' splice site. The model predicted the existence of a circular RNA containing the first 52 nucleotides of the 3' exon. A small circular RNA was isolated and partially sequenced and found to support the model. So, a cryptic 5' splice site can function even if it is located downstream from the 3' splice site. Precursor RNA labeled at its 5' end, presumably by a GTP exchange reaction mediated by the IVS, is also described.  相似文献   

12.
A guanosine to cytosine transversion at position 2 of the fifth intron of the mitochondrial gene COB blocks the ligation step of splicing. This mutation prevents the formation of a base pair within the P1 helix of this group I intron--the RNA duplex formed between the 3' end of the upstream exon and the internal guide sequence. The mutation also reduces the rate of the first step of splicing (guanosine addition at the 5' splice junction) while stimulating hydrolysis at the 3' intron-exon boundary. Consequently, the ligation of exons is blocked because the 3' exon is removed prior to cleavage at the 5' splice junction. The lesion can be suppressed by second-site mutations that preserve the potential for base-pairing at this position. Because the P1 duplex and the P10 duplex (between the guide sequence and the 3' exon) overlap at the affected pairings represent alternative structures that do not, indeed cannot, form simultaneously.  相似文献   

13.
Polypyrimidine tract binding protein (PTB) represses some alternatively spliced exons by direct occlusion of splice sites. In repressing the splicing of the c-src N1 exon, we find that PTB acts by a different mechanism. PTB does not interfere with U1 snRNP binding to the N1 5' splice site. Instead, PTB prevents formation of the prespliceosomal early (E) complex across the intervening intron by preventing the assembly of the splicing factor U2AF on the 3' splice site of exon 4. When the unregulated 5' splice site of the upstream exon 3 is present, U2AF binding is restored and splicing between exons 3 and 4 proceeds in spite of the N1 exon bound PTB. Thus, rather than directly blocking the N1 splice sites, PTB prevents the 5' splice site-dependent assembly of U2AF into the E complex. This mechanism likely occurs in many other alternative exons.  相似文献   

14.
Pre-mRNA splicing is carried out by the spliceosome, which identifies exons and removes intervening introns. In vertebrates, most splice sites are initially recognized by the spliceosome across the exon, because most exons are small and surrounded by large introns. This gene architecture predicts that efficient exon recognition depends largely on the strength of the flanking 3' and 5' splice sites. However, it is unknown if the 3' or the 5' splice site dominates the exon recognition process. Here, we test the 3' and 5' splice site contributions towards efficient exon recognition by systematically replacing the splice sites of an internal exon with sequences of different splice site strengths. We show that the presence of an optimal splice site does not guarantee exon inclusion and that the best predictor for exon recognition is the sum of both splice site scores. Using a genome-wide approach, we demonstrate that the combined 3' and 5' splice site strengths of internal exons provide a much more significant separator between constitutive and alternative exons than either the 3' or the 5' splice site strength alone.  相似文献   

15.
Trans splicing of mRNA precursors in vitro   总被引:32,自引:0,他引:32  
M M Konarska  R A Padgett  P A Sharp 《Cell》1985,42(1):165-171
Two exon segments from two separate RNA molecules can be joined in a trans splicing process. In trans splicing reactions, an RNA molecule containing an exon, a 5' splice site, and adjacent intron sequences was mixed with an RNA molecule containing an exon, a 3' splice site, and adjacent intron sequences. The efficiency of trans splicing of these two RNAs increased if the two termini of the intervening sequences were paired in a short RNA duplex. However, trans splicing of two RNA molecules with no significant complementarity was also observed. These results strongly suggest that significant secondary structures within intervening sequences could affect the splicing of flanking exons. Similarly, RNAs that are complementary to segments within the intervening sequences could potentially regulate the selection of splice sites. Finally, some organisms might use trans splicing to distribute a single exon to many different mRNAs.  相似文献   

16.
17.
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   

18.
19.
Certain thalassemic human beta-globin pre-mRNAs carry mutations that generate aberrant splice sites and/or activate cryptic splice sites, providing a convenient and clinically relevant system to study splice site selection. Antisense 2'-O-methyl oligoribonucleotides were used to block a number of sequences in these pre-mRNAs and were tested for their ability to inhibit splicing in vitro or to affect the ratio between aberrantly and correctly spliced products. By this approach, it was found that (i) up to 19 nucleotides upstream from the branch point adenosine are involved in proper recognition and functioning of the branch point sequence; (ii) whereas at least 25 nucleotides of exon sequences at both 3' and 5' ends are required for splicing, this requirement does not extend past the 5' splice site sequence of the intron; and (iii) improving the 5' splice site of the internal exon to match the consensus sequence strongly decreases the accessibility of the upstream 3' splice site to antisense 2'-O-methyl oligoribonucleotides. This result most likely reflects changes in the strength of interactions near the 3' splice site in response to improvement of the 5' splice site and further supports the existence of communication between these sites across the exon.  相似文献   

20.
We have shown previously that truncation of the human beta-globin pre-mRNA in the second exon, 14 nucleotides downstream from the 3' splice site, leads to inhibition of splicing but not cleavage at the 5' splice site. We now show that several nonglobin sequences substituted at this site can restore splicing and that the efficiency of splicing depends on the length of the second (downstream) exon and not a specific sequence. Deletions in the first exon have no effect on the efficiency of in vitro splicing. Surprisingly, an intron fragment from the 5' region of the human or rabbit beta-globin intron 2, when placed 14 nucleotides downstream from the 3' splice site, inhibited all the steps in splicing beginning with cleavage at the 5' splice site. This result suggests that the intron 2 fragment carries a "poison" sequence that can inhibit the splicing of an upstream intron.  相似文献   

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