Article
- The EMBO Journal (1997) 16, 2119 - 2129
- doi:10.1093/emboj/16.8.2119
There is a Retraction (May 1999) associated with this Article.
Site-specific deoxynucleotide substitutions in yeast U6 snRNA block splicing of pre-mRNA in vitro
Chang Hee Kim1, Daniel E. Ryan1, Tadeusz Marciniec2 and John Abelson1
- Division of Biology 147-75, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
- Present address: The Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, St Vincent's Medical Centre, 376 Victoria Street, Darlinghurst, NSW 2010, Australia
Correspondence to:
John Abelson, E-mail: abelsonj@starbase1.caltech.edu
Received 13 September 1996; Revised 30 December 1996
Abstract
We have identified 2'-hydroxyl groups of the U6 phosphate-ribose backbone which are required for reconstitution of splicing activity in U6-depleted yeast extract. To screen the 2'-hydroxyls of yeast U6 at nucleotides 39–88, spanning the conserved central domain, synthetic U6 RNAs were constructed with deoxyribonucleotides incorporated site specifically. Only four individual deoxynucleotide substitutions blocked splicing activity: dA51 (in the ACAGAG sequence), dA62 (next to the AGC triad), and dU70 and dC72 (both in the loop of the 3' intramolecular stem–loop). Native gel analysis revealed that these deoxy-substituted U6 RNAs were competent for assembly of spliceosomes. Interestingly, a 2'-O-methyl substituent at A51, A62, U70 or C72 did not inhibit splicing activity, indicating that the essential 2'-OH groups at these positions in U6 act as hydrogen bond acceptors or neutral coordinated ligands. The requisite 2'-hydroxyls at A62, U70 and C72 show both similarities and differences relative to the positions of essential 2'-hydroxyls of catalytic domain V of group II ribozymes. The identification of the essential 2'-hydroxyls at positions 62, 70 and 72 corroborates that the 3' intramolecular stem–loop in U6 plays an important role in pre-mRNA splicing.
Keywords:
- group II intron,
- 2'-hydroxyl,
- spliceosome,
- stem–loop,
- U6 reconstitution



