Abstract
The 35 S percursor of the Neurospora mitochondrial large rRNA contains a 2.3-kilobase intron located towards its 3' end. The intron RNA is excised in a single cleavage-ligation reaction and is detectable in mitochondria by Northern hybridization experiments. We now show (i) that the free intron RNA is a full-length linear molecule, and (ii) that it, like the Tetrahymena nuclear rRNA intron, contains an extra, noncoded guanosine residue at its 5' end. The latter finding suggests that the Neurospora mitochondrial large rRNA may be spliced via a phosphoester transfer mechanism similar to that proposed for the "self-splicing" Tetrahymena intron.
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