Abstract

Group II introns are mobile genetic elements that perform both self-splicing and intron mobility reactions. These ribozymes are comprised of a catalytic RNA core that binds to an intron-encoded protein (IEP) to form a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex. Splicing proceeds through two competing reactions: hydrolysis or branching. Group IIC intron ribozymes have a minimal RNA architecture, and splice almost exclusively through hydrolysis in ribozyme reactions. Addition of the IEP allows the splicing reaction to form branched lariat RNPs capable of intron mobility. Here we examine ribozyme splicing, IEP-dependent splicing, and mobility reactions of a group IIC intron from the thermophilic bacterium Thermoanerobacter italicus (Ta.it.I1). We show that Ta.it.I1 is highly active for ribozyme activity, forming linear hydrolytic intron products. Addition of purified IEP switches activity to the canonical lariat forming splicing reaction. We demonstrate that the Ta.it.I1 group IIC intron coordinates the progression of the forward splicing reaction through a π–π′ interaction between intron domains II and VI. We further show that branched splicing is supported in the absence of the IEP when the π–π′ interaction is mutated. We also investigated the regulation of the two steps of reverse splicing during intron mobility into DNA substrates. Using a fluorescent mobility assay that simultaneously visualizes all steps of intron integration into DNA, we show that completion of reverse splicing is tightly coupled to cDNA synthesis regardless of mutation of the π–π′ interaction.

Highlights

  • Group II introns are self-splicing ribozymes that reside within the genomes of bacteria (Ferat and Michel 1993; Toro 2003) and the organelles of yeast, fungi, algae, and plants (Michel et al 1989; Fedorova and Zingler 2007; Bonen 2008)

  • We show that the Ta.it.I1 group IIC intron from the thermophilic bacterium Thermoanerobacter italicus is dependent upon its encoded

  • Competition between the hydrolytic and lariat forming splicing pathways is starkly different between group II intron structural classes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Group II introns are self-splicing ribozymes that reside within the genomes of bacteria (Ferat and Michel 1993; Toro 2003) and the organelles of yeast, fungi, algae, and plants (Michel et al 1989; Fedorova and Zingler 2007; Bonen 2008) These RNAs are divergent in primary sequence, they fold into highly conserved structures that catalyze self-excision from precursor transcripts (Qin and Pyle 1998; Toor et al 2001,2009; Michel et al 2009).

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call