CU Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
MCDB Home > faculty > FacultyPublications > Lykke-AndersenJPublications > Structural characteristics of the stable ... es and their splicing junctions
Document Actions

Structural characteristics of the stable ... es and their splicing junctions


Structural characteristics of the stable RNA introns of archaeal hyperthermophiles and their splicing junctions.

25

Five pre-23 S rRNA introns have been characterized for hyperthermophilic archaea. The small ones constitute stable core structures while the three larger ones contain, in addition, open reading frames, two of which encode homing-type endonucleases. The higher order structures of in vitro transcripts of the introns and their exon-intron junctions were examined using chemical and ribonuclease probes specific for unpaired nucleotides, double helical regions and helix-loop junctions. The experimental data support both the formation of a bulge-helix-bulge structural motif at the exon-intron junctions, which is recognized by a cleavage enzyme, and the presence of an adjacent core structure consisting of a long, stable, stem-loop structure. Moreover, the data were used to derive secondary structural models for the three large introns which form stable, circular, RNA species, in vivo. Each exhibits extensive secondary structure and additional, as yet undefined, higher order structure, compatible with their high level of stability in vivo; limited structural similarities were detected between the two introns encoding the homing-type endonucleases. The data are compatible with the hypothesis that RNA introns can be transmitted between archaeal hyperthermophile cells.


Lykke-Andersen J, Garrett RA

Journal of molecular biology

1994-11-11 00:00

243

5

846-55

Archaea,Base Sequence,Introns,Molecular Sequence Data,Molecular Structure,RNA Splicing,RNA, Ribosomal, 23S,RNA, Ribosomal, 23S

Institute of Molecular Biology, Copenhagen University, Denmark

J. Mol. Biol.


0022-2836

10.1006/jmbi.1994.1687

S0022-2836(84)71687-1

819

True

7966305

University of Colorado Contact Us  |   Legal & Trademarks  |  Privacy