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Five Classes of Introns. Archaeal introns (tRNAs and rRNAs). Generic Splicing Reaction. 5 ’ splice junction. 3 ’ splice junction. Intron. Exon 1. Exon 2. Intron. Exon 1. Exon 2. Two Steps ( “ Scissors than Tape ” ): Step 1 : Break phosphodiester bonds at the exon-intron boundaries
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Five Classes of Introns Archaeal introns (tRNAs and rRNAs)
Generic Splicing Reaction 5’ splice junction 3’ splice junction Intron Exon 1 Exon 2 Intron Exon 1 Exon 2 Two Steps (“Scissors than Tape”): Step 1: Break phosphodiester bonds at the exon-intron boundaries (splice junctions). 5’ bond broken before 3’ bond Step 2: Formation of a new phosphodiester bond between 3’ end of upstream exon and 5’ end of downstream exon
Transesterification • Splicing of Group I, II, and Pre-mRNA introns results from two sequential transesterification reactions • “Transesterification” occurs when a hydroxyl group makes a nucleophilic attack on a phosphodiester bond to form a new phosphodiester bond while displacing a hydroxyl group • The reaction requires no energy (ATP-independent) • Phosphate is conserved
Group I Introns Location: • NuclearrRNA genes of unicellular organisms (e.g. tetrahymena + other ciliates) • OrganellartRNAs and rRNAs (mitochondria and chloroplasts) • rRNA, mRNA, tRNA in bacteria (but rare) • Viruses (e.g. T4 thymidylate synthase mRNA gene) • Not found in vertebrates (e.g. “us”) • Role as Mobile Genetic Elements: • introns can encode homing endonucleases that allow intron mobility
Group I Intron Structure • Little conservation of • primary structure (e.g. P, Q, • R, S elements, 3’splice-site G) • All group I introns • fold into a characteristic • secondary structure • (and likely tertiary structure) • X-ray structure has been • solved for most of the intron • from tetrahymena rRNA • RNA folding is critical • for splicing
Group I Secondary Structure Internal Guide Sequence (IGS) G Binding Site (Active Site) Conserved G
Group I Intron Splicing Mechanism G Autocatalytic or “Self-splicing” Sequential Transesterfications: Step I: 3’OH of an exogenous guanosine attacks the phosphodiester bond at the 5’ splice site -G covalently linked to intron -5’exon now contains a 3’ OH group Step II: 3’ OH of 5’exon attacks the phosphodiester bond of 3’ splice site -intron is released -exons are ligated together 3’ exon OH G 5’ exon intron Step 1 G G Step 2 intron 5’ exon 3’ exon Joined exons (mature RNA)
Group II Introns Location: • rRNA, tRNA, mRNA Eukaryotic organelles -mitochondria (fungi), chloroplasts (plants) • mRNA of some Eubacteria (i.e. prokaryotes) Splicing: • Autocatalytic or self-splicing in vitro • proteins required in vivo Role as Mobile Genetic Elements: • Introns often encode reverse transcriptasesthat allow intron to change genomic position.
Structure of Group II Introns • Group II introns exhibit little primary sequence conservation • All fold into a common secondary structure containing • six helical domains (d1-d6) that emanate from a “central wheel” • Domains 5 and 6 contain important catalytic activity
Tertiary Interactions Critical for Splicing of Group II Introns • Exon binding sequences (EBS 1 and 2) in domain I to intron binding sequences (IBS 1 and 2) near 5’ end of 5’ exon (helps define 5’ splice-site) • Nucleotides in loop of domain 5 interact with nucleotides in domain I • Nucleotides in “wheel” (RGA=g) interact with 3’ splice site (YA= g’) (helps define 3’ splice-site) • Nucleotides in in domain 1(e’) interact with those near 5’ splice site (e)
Group II Introns “Catalytic Core” (Active Site) Branch Point Adenosine 5’ EXON 3’ EXON
Splicing Mechanism for Group II and Pre-mRNA Introns Lariat Intermediate 2’ to 5’ Linkage 3’ to 5’ Linkage Phosphate is conserved
Nuclear Pre-mRNA Introns • Location: • Common in vertebrates, numerous introns/gene • Rare in unicellular eukaryotes like yeast, usually one intron/gene when any • Conserved Sequences: • at splice junctions (GT-AG rule), branch site and polypyrimidine tracts • 5’ splice sitebranch sitepolypyrimidine tract 3’ splice site • yeast AG/GUAUGU UACUAAC Yn CAG/G • metazoans: AG/GURAGU YNCURAC YYYYn YAG/G • A in branch site adenosine is called the branch point • Spacing between the elements is important • The 5’ splice site is generally >45 nucleotides from the branch point • The 3’ splice site is generally 18-38 nucleotides away from the metazoan branch point and 6-150 nucleotides from the yeast branch point
Pre-mRNA Splicing • Requires ~100 proteins and 5 RNAs • Occurs in a large RNP assembly known as the “Spliceosome” • Catalytic component unknown but may be RNA-catalyzed • Splicing via sequential transesterification reactions (same chemical steps as Group II intron splicing)
Pre-tRNA Splicing Splice
Splicing of NuclearPre-tRNAIntrons(in Yeast )Protein-catalyzed1) endonuclease 2) ‘ligase’with 5 activities P Endonuclease OH Ligase or ATP ‘Kinase’ ‘Cyclic Phosphodiesterase’ 3’ phosphodiesterase ‘Adenylase’ ‘Ligase’ ‘2'-Phospho transferase’
Splicing in Archaea • tRNAs and rRNAs • Endonuclease: • -symmetric homodimer • - recognizes/cuts a bulge-helix-bulge motif formed by pairing of region near two exon-intron junctions • Ligase: • - joins exons and circularizes introns
Bulge-Helix-Bulge Motif • Two 3 nt bulges on opposite strands separated by 4 bp Buldge Helix Buldge
tRNA Processing in Archaea BHB Endonuclease Ligase
Summary of Intron Splicing Mechanisms Catalytic Mechanisms: nucleophiles, introns, catalysts Splice-site Selection: splice junctions, recognition