Abstract

Spliceosomal introns interrupt nuclear genes and are removed from RNA transcripts ("spliced") by machinery called spliceosomes. Although the vast majority of spliceosomal introns are removed by the so-called major (or "U2") spliceosome, diverse eukaryotes also contain a rare second form, the minor ("U12") spliceosome, and associated ("U12-type") introns.1-3 In all characterized species, U12-type introns are distinguished by several features, including being rare in the genome (∼0.5% of all introns),4-6 containing extended evolutionarily conserved splicing motifs,4,5,7,8 being generally ancient,9,10 and being inefficiently spliced.11-13 Here, we report a remarkable exception in the slime mold Physarum polycephalum. The P.polycephalum genome contains >20,000U12-type introns-25 times more than any other species-enriched in a diversity of non-canonical splice boundaries as well as transformed splicing signals that appear to have co-evolved with the spliceosome due to massive gain of efficiently spliced U12-type introns. These results reveal an unappreciated dynamism of minor spliceosomal introns and spliceosomal introns in general.

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