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1.
We have investigated the RNA structure of the region surrounding the muscle-specific exon 6B of the chicken beta-tropomyosin gene. We have used a variety of chemical and enzymatic probes: dimethylsulfate, N-cyclohexyl-N'-(2-(N-methylmorpholino)-ethyl)-carbodiimide-p-tolu enesulfonate) , RNase T1 and RNase V1. Lead acetate was also used to obtain some information on the tertiary structure of this region. Probing the wild-type sequence suggests a model involving one-stem and three-stem-loop structures in and around this exon. Two of these, hairpin I and stem III, have previously been implicated in repression of splicing of the intron following exon 6B in a HeLa nuclear extract. Stem I includes sequences at the beginning of exon 6B and stem III results from interaction of the intron upstream from exon 6B with sequences in the middle of the intron downstream from this exon (the intron whose splicing is repressed). Neither stem I nor stem III directly involves the consensus sequences (5' splice site, branch-point, 3' splice site) of the repressed intron. Probing RNAs that are derepressed for splicing of this intron show that there are structural changes around the 5' splice site and branch-point sequence that correlate with the derepression. This is true, despite the fact that the derepressed RNAs are altered in a region far from these consensus sequences. The most striking structural correlation with splicing capacity of the intron downstream from exon 6B is seen by probing with lead acetate. Lead ions cut RNA at specific residues; these sites are very sensitive to RNA tertiary structure. Repressed and derepressed RNAs show entirely different cleavage patterns after incubation with lead acetate. Remarkably, hybridizing a derepressed RNA with an RNA comprising the ascending arm of stem III not only re-establishes repression, but also converts the pattern of susceptibility to attack by lead ions over the whole molecule. We suggest that RNA conformation plays a role in keeping exon 6B from being spliced into non-muscle cell mRNA.  相似文献   

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M M?rl  C Schmelzer 《Cell》1990,60(4):629-636
Group II intron bI1, the first intron of the COB gene in the mitochondria of S. cerevisiae, is able to self-splice in vitro with the basic pathway similar to nuclear pre-mRNA splicing. We show that incubation of the intron lariat with ligated exons bE1 and bE2 leads to a complete reversal of the splicing reaction. The integration of the intron into the ligated exons is correct; the reconstituted preRNA of the reverse reaction can undergo a self-splicing reaction anew. When incubated with a foreign RNA species bearing a sequence motif that is complementary to exon binding site 1, the lariat can integrate into this RNA with the position of insertion immediately downstream of this sequence. This result implies that transposition of group II introns on the RNA level by reversal of the splicing reaction is, in principle, conceivable.  相似文献   

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Human papillomavirus 16 (HPV16) E6E7 pre-mRNA is bicistronic and has an intron in the E6 coding region with one 5' splice site and two alternative 3' splice sites, which produce E6(*)I and E6(*)II, respectively. If this intron remains unspliced, the resulting E6E7 mRNA expresses oncogenic E6. We found for the first time that the E6E7 pre-mRNA was efficiently spliced in vitro only when capped and that cellular cap-binding factors were involved in the splicing. The cap-dependent splicing of the E6E7 pre-mRNA was extremely efficient in cervical cancer-derived cells, producing mostly E6(*)I, but inefficient in cells transfected with a common retrovirus expression vector, pLXSN16E6E7, due to the large size of this vector's exon 1. Further studies showed that efficient splicing of the E6E7 pre-mRNA depends on the distance of the cap-proximal intron from the RNA 5' cap, with an optimal distance of less than 307nt in order to facilitate better association of U1 small nuclear RNA with the intron 5' splice site. The same was true for splicing of human beta-globin RNA. Splicing of the E6E7 RNA provided more E7 RNA templates and promoted E7 translation, whereas a lack of RNA splicing produced a low level of E7 translation. Together, our data indicate that the distance between the RNA 5' cap and cap-proximal intron is rate limiting for RNA splicing. HPV16 E6E7 pre-mRNA takes advantage of its small cap-proximal exon to confer efficient splicing for better E7 expression.  相似文献   

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C C Huang  M Narita  T Yamagata  Y Itoh  G Endo 《Gene》1999,234(2):361-369
A unique transposon was found in the chromosome of Bacillus megaterium MB1, a Gram-positive bacterium isolated from mercury-polluted sediments of Minamata Bay, Japan. The transposon region of a 14.5kb DNA fragment was amplified by PCR using a single PCR primer designed from the nucleotide sequence of an inverted repeat of class II transposons. The molecular analysis revealed that the PCR-amplified DNA fragment encodes a transposition module similar to that of Tn21. The transposon also encodes a broad-spectrum mercury resistance region having a restriction endonuclease map identical to that of Bacillus cereus RC607, a strain isolated from Boston Harbor, USA. The result of a phylogenetic analysis of the amino acid sequence of putative resolvase of the transposon showed that the transposon is phylogenetically closer to the transposons of Gram-positive bacteria than those of Gram-negative bacteria. Besides the transposition module and mer operon, the transposon encodes a mobile genetic element of bacterial group II introns between the resolvase gene and mer operon. The intron, however, does not intervene in any exon gene. The discovery of this newly found combination of the complex mobile elements may offer a clue to understanding the horizontal dissemination of broad-spectrum mercury resistance among microbes.  相似文献   

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Circularly permuted group I intron precursor RNAs, containing end-to-end fused exons which interrupt half-intron sequences, were generated and tested for self-splicing activity. An autocatalytic RNA can form when the primary order of essential intron sequence elements, splice sites, and exons are permuted in this manner. Covalent attachment of guanosine to the 5' half-intron product, and accurate exon ligation indicated that the mechanism and specificity of splicing were not altered. However, because the exons were fused and the order of the splice sites reversed, splicing released the fused-exon as a circle. With this arrangement of splice sites, circular exon production was a prediction of the group I splicing mechanism. Circular RNAs have properties that would make them attractive for certain studies of RNA structure and function. Reversal of splice site sequences in a context that allows splicing, such as those generated by circularly permuted group I introns, could be used to generate short defined sequences of circular RNA in vitro and perhaps in vivo.  相似文献   

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The nuclear small subunit ribosomal RNA gene of the unicellular green alga Ankistrodesmus stipitatus contains a group I intron, the first of its kind to be found in the nucleus of a member of the plant kingdom. The intron RNA closely resembles the group I intron found in the large subunit rRNA precursor of Tetrahymena thermophila, differing by only eight nucleotides of 48 in the catalytic core and having the same peripheral secondary structure elements. The Ankistrodesmus RNA self-splices in vitro, yielding the typical group I intron splicing intermediates and products. Unlike the Tetrahymena intron, however, splicing is accelerated by high concentrations of monovalent cations and is rate-limited by the exon ligation step. This system provides an opportunity to understand how limited changes in intron sequence and structure alter the properties of an RNA catalytic center.  相似文献   

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