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Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator

Bacterial IIC introns are a newly recognized subclass of group II introns whose ribozyme properties have not been characterized in detail. IIC introns are typically located downstream of transcriptional terminator motifs (inverted repeat followed by T's) or other inverted repeats in bacterial g...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Toor, Navtej, Robart, Aaron R., Christianson, Joshua, Zimmerly, Steven
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2006
Materias:
RNA
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1702495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17130159
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl820
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author Toor, Navtej
Robart, Aaron R.
Christianson, Joshua
Zimmerly, Steven
author_facet Toor, Navtej
Robart, Aaron R.
Christianson, Joshua
Zimmerly, Steven
author_sort Toor, Navtej
collection PubMed
description Bacterial IIC introns are a newly recognized subclass of group II introns whose ribozyme properties have not been characterized in detail. IIC introns are typically located downstream of transcriptional terminator motifs (inverted repeat followed by T's) or other inverted repeats in bacterial genomes. Here we have characterized the self-splicing activity of a IIC intron, B.h.I1, from Bacillus halodurans. B.h.I1 self-splices in vitro through hydrolysis to produce linear intron, but interestingly, additional unexpected products were formed that were highly dependent on ionic conditions. These products were determined to represent alternative splicing events at the 5′ junction and cleavages throughout the RNA transcript. The alternative splicing and cleavage events occurred at cryptic splice sites containing stem–loop and IBS1 motifs, suggesting that the 5′ exon is recognized by both elements. These results provide the first example of a group II intron that uses 5′ splice sites nonadjacent to the ribozyme structure. Furthermore, the data suggest that IIC introns differ from IIA and IIB introns with respect to 5′ exon definition, and that the terminator stem–loop substitutes in part for the missing IBS2–EBS2 (intron and exon binding sites 2) interaction.
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spelling pubmed-17024952006-12-26 Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator Toor, Navtej Robart, Aaron R. Christianson, Joshua Zimmerly, Steven Nucleic Acids Res RNA Bacterial IIC introns are a newly recognized subclass of group II introns whose ribozyme properties have not been characterized in detail. IIC introns are typically located downstream of transcriptional terminator motifs (inverted repeat followed by T's) or other inverted repeats in bacterial genomes. Here we have characterized the self-splicing activity of a IIC intron, B.h.I1, from Bacillus halodurans. B.h.I1 self-splices in vitro through hydrolysis to produce linear intron, but interestingly, additional unexpected products were formed that were highly dependent on ionic conditions. These products were determined to represent alternative splicing events at the 5′ junction and cleavages throughout the RNA transcript. The alternative splicing and cleavage events occurred at cryptic splice sites containing stem–loop and IBS1 motifs, suggesting that the 5′ exon is recognized by both elements. These results provide the first example of a group II intron that uses 5′ splice sites nonadjacent to the ribozyme structure. Furthermore, the data suggest that IIC introns differ from IIA and IIB introns with respect to 5′ exon definition, and that the terminator stem–loop substitutes in part for the missing IBS2–EBS2 (intron and exon binding sites 2) interaction. Oxford University Press 2006-12 2006-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC1702495/ /pubmed/17130159 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl820 Text en © 2006 The Author(s).
spellingShingle RNA
Toor, Navtej
Robart, Aaron R.
Christianson, Joshua
Zimmerly, Steven
Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
title Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
title_full Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
title_fullStr Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
title_full_unstemmed Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
title_short Self-splicing of a group IIC intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
title_sort self-splicing of a group iic intron: 5′ exon recognition and alternative 5′ splicing events implicate the stem–loop motif of a transcriptional terminator
topic RNA
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1702495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17130159
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl820
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