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1.
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   

2.
We developed an in vitro cleaving assay for the thymidylate synthase (td) group I intron and observed that the off-rate of the substrate is faster than cleavage. From the sequence stems P1 and P2 can vary from 4 to 8 and from 6 to 10 base pairs, respectively, with folding of a long P1 stem being in competition with folding of a long P2 stem. Shorter substrates, which cannot compete with the formation of an extended P2, result in faster cleavage, suggesting that binding of the substrate indeed interferes with folding of stem P2. In vivo splicing analyses of mutants containing alterations in stems P1 and P2 indicate that the wild-type exon sequence of P1 is suboptimal for splicing. Furthermore, folding of P1 in vivo is in competition with an alternative cryptic P1 stem resulting in mis-splicing. Translation promotes splicing at the correct 5' splice site, whereas in the absence of translation, mis-splicing is favored. The combination of the in vitro and in vivo assays clearly displays the folding problems for correct splice site selection in this group I intron.  相似文献   

3.
Tertiary interactions are important in the higher-order folding of catalytic RNAs. Recently, a base triple, joining the two major domains of the catalytic core, was determined in group I introns from the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC7120 and the eukaryote Tetrahymena thermophila. This base triple involves the fifth base pair of P4 and the fifth base of the single-stranded region J8/7. We made base pair and single-nucleotide substitutions in the fifth base pair of P4, a G-C in the wild-type Anabaena intron, and tested them for self-splicing activity. The results suggest a hydrogen bonding model in which only the C of the base pair interacts directly with the fifth base of J8/7. Comparative sequence analysis was used to determine the different combinations of base triples that occur in approximately 450 natural group I introns identified to date. About 94% of the base triples analyzed are compatible with the proposed hydrogen bonding model. Disrupting this base triple in the Tetrahymena intron resulted in the disappearance of splicing intermediates (intron 3' exon and 5' exon), even though the first step of splicing was not affected. Restoration of the base triple by a compensatory mutation reverted the intermediates to wild-type levels. These results suggest that disruption of the base triple increases the rate of the second step of splicing or of a conformational change preceding the second step. Repositioning of the base triple to form a new set of interactions may be required for the second step of splicing.  相似文献   

4.
A group I intron from a bacterial tRNA precursor has been converted into an RNA enzyme that catalyzes the efficient polymerization of oligoribonucleotide analogs of tRNA exons using a reaction scheme consisting of multiple cycles of reverse and forward exon ligation reactions. Here, we present results showing that this system represents a novel and useful tool for the analysis of 3' splice site reactions of group I ribozymes. First, analysis of variant substrates containing base substitutions in group I secondary structure elements P1, P9.0 and P10 confirms that exon polymerization is dependent on these structures, and therefore constitutes an appropriate and relevant model system for studying the exon ligation step of splicing. Second, to probe interactions between the intron's catalytic core and the bases and backbone of the P1/P10 reaction helix, two successful strategies for separating the internal guide sequence from the intron core were devised. One such strategy uses a construct in which the reaction helix interacts functionally with the catalytic core using only tertiary contacts. Further stabilization of this interaction through the inclusion of a 7 bp intermolecular P2 helix generates increased reaction efficiency. Third, when provided with two reaction helices, the ribozyme synthesizes mixed polymers through a mechanism that involves sequential binding and release of the duplexes. Fourth, in these reactions, turnover of the external guide sequence requires unwinding and annealing of the P2 helix, suggesting that P2 unwinding may occur during group I splicing. These results provide novel experimental tools to probe the relatively poorly understood 3' splice site reactions of group I introns, and may be relevant to ribozyme-catalyzed assembly and recombination of oligomers in prebiotic scenarios.  相似文献   

5.
The aminoglycoside antibiotic neomycin B inhibits translation in prokaryotes and interferes with RNA-protein interactions in HIV both in vivo and in vitro. Hitherto, inhibition of ribozyme catalysis has only been observed in vitro. We therefore monitored the activity of neomycin B and several other aminoglycoside antibiotics on splicing of the T4 phage thymidylate synthase (td) intron in vivo. All antibiotics tested inhibited splicing, even chloramphenicol, which does not inhibit splicing in vitro. Splicing of the td intron in vivo requires translation for proper folding of the pre-mRNA. In the absence of translation, two interactions between sequences in the upstream exon and the 5' and 3' splice sites trap the pre-mRNA in splicing-incompetent conformations. Their disruption by mutations rendered splicing less dependent on translation and also less sensitive to neomycin B. Intron splicing was affected by neither neomycin B nor gentamicin in Escherichia coli strains carrying antibiotic-resistance genes that modify the ribosomal RNA. Taken together, this demonstrates that in vivo splicing of td intron is not directly inhibited by aminoglycosides, but rather indirectly by their interference with translation. This was further confirmed by assaying splicing of the Tetrahymena group I intron, which is inserted in the E. coli 23 S rRNA and, thus, not translated. Furthermore, neomycin B, paromomycin, and streptomycin enhanced missplicing in antibiotic-sensitive strains. Missplicing is caused by an alternative structural element containing a cryptic 5' splice site, which serves as a substrate for the ribozyme. Our results demonstrate that aminoglycoside antibiotics display different effects on ribozymes in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Splicing of nuclear mRNA precursors (pre-mRNAs) takes place in the spliceosome, a large and complex ribonucleoprotein. Nuclear pre-mRNA splicing and group II intron self-splicing occur by a chemically identical pathway involving recognition of a specific branchpoint adenosine and nucleophilic activation of its 2'-hydroxyl group. The chemical similarity between these two splicing reactions, as well as other considerations, have suggested that the catalytic core of the spliceosome and group II introns may be related. Here we test this hypothesis by analyzing splicing and RNA branch formation of a pre-mRNA and a group II intron in which the branchpoint adenosine was substituted with purine base analogues. We find that replacement of the branchpoint adenosine with either of two modified adenosine analogues or guanosine leads to remarkably similar patterns of splicing and RNA branch formation in the two systems.  相似文献   

7.
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9.
Mohr S  Stryker JM  Lambowitz AM 《Cell》2002,109(6):769-779
The Neurospora crassa CYT-18 protein, the mitochondrial tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, functions in splicing group I introns by inducing formation of the catalytically active RNA structure. Here, we identified a DEAD-box protein (CYT-19) that functions in concert with CYT-18 to promote group I intron splicing in vivo and vitro. CYT-19 does not bind specifically to group I intron RNAs and instead functions as an ATP-dependent RNA chaperone to destabilize nonnative RNA structures that constitute kinetic traps in the CYT-18-assisted RNA-folding pathway. Our results demonstrate that a DExH/D-box protein has a specific, physiologically relevant chaperone function in the folding of a natural RNA substrate.  相似文献   

10.
Group II introns are large catalytic RNA molecules that fold into compact structures essential for the catalysis of splicing and intron mobility reactions. Despite a growing body of information on the folded state of group II introns at equilibrium, there is currently no information on the folding pathway and little information on the ionic requirements for folding. Folding isotherms were determined by hydroxyl radical footprinting for the 32 individual protections that are distributed throughout a group II intron ribozyme derived from intron ai5gamma. The isotherms span a similar range of Mg(2+) concentrations and share a similar index of cooperativity. Time-resolved hydroxyl radical footprinting studies show that all regions of the ribozyme fold slowly and with remarkable synchrony into a single catalytically active structure at a rate comparable to those of other ribozymes studied thus far. The rate constants for the formation of tertiary contacts and recovery of catalytic activity are identical within experimental error. Catalytic activity analyses in the presence of urea provide no evidence that the slow folding of the ai5gamma intron is attributable to the presence of unproductive kinetic traps along the folding pathway. Taken together, the data suggest that the rate-limiting step for folding of group II intron ai5gamma occurs early along the reaction pathway. We propose that this behavior resembles protein folding that is limited in rate by high contact order, or the need to form key tertiary interactions from partners that are located far apart in the primary or secondary structure.  相似文献   

11.
Group II introns are ribozymes that catalyze a splicing reaction with the same chemical steps as spliceosome-mediated splicing. Many group II introns have lost the capacity to self-splice while acquiring compensatory interactions with host-derived protein cofactors. Degenerate group II introns are particularly abundant in the organellar genomes of plants, where their requirement for nuclear-encoded splicing factors provides a means for the integration of nuclear and organellar functions. We present a biochemical analysis of the interactions between a nuclear-encoded group II splicing factor and its chloroplast intron target. The maize (Zea mays) protein Chloroplast RNA Splicing 1 (CRS1) is required specifically for the splicing of the group II intron in the chloroplast atpF gene and belongs to a plant-specific protein family defined by a recently recognized RNA binding domain, the CRM domain. We show that CRS1's specificity for the atpF intron in vivo can be explained by CRS1's intrinsic RNA binding properties. CRS1 binds in vitro with high affinity and specificity to atpF intron RNA and does so through the recognition of elements in intron domains I and IV. These binding sites are not conserved in other group II introns, accounting for CRS1's intron specificity. In the absence of CRS1, the atpF intron has little uniform tertiary structure even at elevated [Mg2+]. CRS1 binding reorganizes the RNA, such that intron elements expected to be at the catalytic core become less accessible to solvent. We conclude that CRS1 promotes the folding of its group II intron target through tight and specific interactions with two peripheral intron segments.  相似文献   

12.
The upstream site of cleavage of all group I self-splicing introns is identified by an absolutely conserved U.G base pair. Although a wobble C.A pair can substitute the U.G pair, all other combinations of nucleotides at this position abolish splicing, suggesting that it is an unusual RNA structure, rather than sequence, that is recognized by the catalytic intron core. RNA enzymes are metalloenzymes, and divalent metal ion binding may be an important requirement for splice site recognition and catalysis. The paramagnetic broadening of NMR resonances upon manganese binding at specific sites was used to probe the interaction between divalent metal ions and an oligonucleotide model of a group I intron ribozyme substrate. Unlike previous studies in which only imino proton resonances were monitored, we have used isotopically labelled RNA and a set of complete spectral assignments to identify the location of the divalent metal binding site with much greater detail than previously possible. Two independent metal binding sites were identified for this oligonucleotide. A first metal binding site is located in the major groove of the three consecutive G.C base pairs at the end of double helical stem. A second site is found in the major groove of the RNA double helix in the vicinity of the U.G base pair. These results suggest that metal ion coordination (or a metal bridge) and tertiary interactions identified biochemically, may be used by group I intron ribozymes for substrate recognition.  相似文献   

13.
14.
E Clodi  K Semrad    R Schroeder 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(13):3776-3782
In the absence of proteins, RNAs often misfold in vitro due to alternative base pairings which result from the molecule being trapped in inactive conformations. We identify an in vivo folding trap in the T4 phage td gene, caused by nine base pairs between a sequence element in the upstream exon of the td gene and another at the 3' end of the intron. During translation, the ribosome resolves this interaction; consequently the intron folds correctly and splicing occurs. The introduction of a stop codon upstream of this base pairing prevents resolution of the inactive structure so that splicing cannot proceed. We have used this folding trap to probe for RNA binding proteins which, when overexpressed, either resolve the misfolded structure or impede its formation in vivo. We distinguish between proteins which recognize the intron structure and those which bind non-specifically and apparently ignore the intron. The first class, e.g. Neurospora crassa CYT-18, can rescue the exonic trap and intron mutants which cause a structural defect. However, known RNA chaperones such as Escherichia coli StpA and S12 and the HIV protein NCp7, only resolve the exonic trap without suppressing intron mutations. Thus, this structural trap enables detection of RNA chaperone activity in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
T Tani  Y Takahashi    Y Ohshima 《Nucleic acids research》1992,20(12):2991-2996
U6 small nuclear RNA is one of the spliceosomal RNAs essential for pre-mRNA splicing. Discovery of mRNA-type introns in the highly conserved region of the U6 snRNA genes led to the hypothesis that U6 snRNA functions as a catalytic element during pre-mRNA splicing. The highly conserved region of U6 snRNA has a structural similarity with the catalytic domain of the negative strand of the satellite RNA of tobacco ring spot virus [(-)sTRSV], suggesting that the highly conserved region of U6 snRNA forms the catalytic center. We examined whether synthetic RNAs consisting of the sequence of the highly conserved region of U6 snRNA or various chimeric RNAs between the U6 region and the catalytic RNA of (-)sTRSV could cleave a substrate RNA that can partially base-pair with them and have a GU sequence. Chimeric RNAs with 70 to 83% sequence identity with the conserved region of S. pombe U6 snRNA cleaved the substrate RNA at the 5' side of the GU sequence, which is shared by the 5' end of an intron in a pre-mRNA. We found that the highly conserved region of U6 snRNA and the catalytic domain of (-)sTRSV are strikingly similar in structure to the catalytic core region of the group I self-splicing intron in cyanobacteria. These results suggest that U6 snRNA, (-)sTRSV and the group I self-splicing intron originated from a common ancestral RNA, and support the hypothesis that U6 snRNA catalyzes pre-mRNA splicing reaction.  相似文献   

16.
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18.
The Neurospora CYT-18 protein, a tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, which functions in splicing group I introns in mitochondria, promotes splicing of mutants of the distantly related bacteriophage T4 td intron. In an in vivo assay, wild-type CYT-18 protein expressed in E. coli suppressed mutations in the td intron's catalytic core. CYT-18-suppressible mutations were also suppressed by high Mg2+ or spermidine in vitro, suggesting they affect intron structure. Both the N- and C-terminal domains of CYT-18 are required for efficient splicing, but CYT-18 with a large C-terminal truncation retains some activity. Our results indicate that CYT-18 interacts with conserved structural features of group I introns, and they provide direct evidence that a protein promotes splicing by stabilizing the catalytically active structure of the intron RNA.  相似文献   

19.
Group I introns constitute excellent systems for analyzing the relationship between RNA tertiary folding and catalysis. Within a hierarchical framework interpretation of RNA folding, secondary structure motifs subtend RNA three-dimensional (3D) architecture. Thus, mutations in two-dimensional motifs are expected to have effects different from those disrupting 3D contacts. Using UV spectroscopy, we have studied the influence of nucleotide substitutions, in both secondary and tertiary structure elements, on the thermal stability of the tertiary folding of the bacteriophage T4 td group I intron. Further, we present a quantitative analysis of the relationship between the splicing efficiency in vivo and the stability of the intron structure as monitored by UV melting curves. We conclude that the stability of the tertiary structure of a group I intron as measured by UV melting is generally a good indication of its ability to splice in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Like many structured RNAs, the Tetrahymena group I intron ribozyme folds through multiple pathways and intermediates. Under standard conditions in vitro, a small fraction reaches the native state (N) with kobs ≈ 0.6 min− 1, while the remainder forms a long-lived misfolded conformation (M) thought to differ in topology. These alternative outcomes reflect a pathway that branches late in folding, after disruption of a trapped intermediate (Itrap). Here we use catalytic activity to probe the folding transitions from Itrap to the native and misfolded states. We show that mutations predicted to weaken the core helix P3 do not increase the rate of folding from Itrap but they increase the fraction that reaches the native state rather than forming the misfolded state. Thus, P3 is disrupted during folding to the native state but not to the misfolded state, and P3 disruption occurs after the rate-limiting step. Interestingly, P3-strengthening mutants also increase native folding. Additional experiments show that these mutants are rapidly committed to folding to the native state, although they reach the native state with approximately the same rate constant as the wild-type ribozyme (~ 1 min− 1). Thus, the P3-strengthening mutants populate a distinct pathway that includes at least one intermediate but avoids the M state, most likely because P3 and the correct topology are formed early. Our results highlight multiple pathways in RNA folding and illustrate how kinetic competitions between rapid events can have long-lasting effects because the “choice” is enforced by energy barriers that grow larger as folding progresses.  相似文献   

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