Crystal structure of a group I intron splicing intermediate.
Journal: 2004/December - RNA
ISSN: 1355-8382
Abstract:
A recently reported crystal structure of an intact bacterial group I self-splicing intron in complex with both its exons provided the first molecular view into the mechanism of RNA splicing. This intron structure, which was trapped in the state prior to the exon ligation reaction, also reveals the architecture of a complex RNA fold. The majority of the intron is contained within three internally stacked, but sequence discontinuous, helical domains. Here the tertiary hydrogen bonding and stacking interactions between the domains, and the single-stranded joiner segments that bridge between them, are fully described. Features of the structure include: (1) A pseudoknot belt that circumscribes the molecule at its longitudinal midpoint; (2) two tetraloop-tetraloop receptor motifs at the peripheral edges of the structure; (3) an extensive minor groove triplex between the paired and joiner segments, P6-J6/6a and P3-J3/4, which provides the major interaction interface between the intron's two primary domains (P4-P6 and P3-P9.0); (4) a six-nucleotide J8/7 single stranded element that adopts a mu-shaped structure and twists through the active site, making critical contacts to all three helical domains; and (5) an extensive base stacking architecture that realizes 90% of all possible stacking interactions. The intron structure was validated by hydroxyl radical footprinting, where strong correlation was observed between experimental and predicted solvent accessibility. Models of the pre-first and pre-second steps of intron splicing are proposed with full-sized tRNA exons. They suggest that the tRNA undergoes substantial angular motion relative to the intron between the two steps of splicing.
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RNA 10(12): 1867-1887

Crystal structure of a group I intron splicing intermediate

Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8114, USA
Reprint requests to: Scott A. Strobel, Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, 260 Whitney Ave., New Haven, CT 06520-8114, USA; e-mail: ude.elay.bsc@leborts.
Reprint requests to: Scott A. Strobel, Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, 260 Whitney Ave., New Haven, CT 06520-8114, USA; e-mail: ude.elay.bsc@leborts.
Received 2004 Jul 30; Accepted 2004 Oct 4.

Abstract

A recently reported crystal structure of an intact bacterial group I self-splicing intron in complex with both its exons provided the first molecular view into the mechanism of RNA splicing. This intron structure, which was trapped in the state prior to the exon ligation reaction, also reveals the architecture of a complex RNA fold. The majority of the intron is contained within three internally stacked, but sequence discontinuous, helical domains. Here the tertiary hydrogen bonding and stacking interactions between the domains, and the single-stranded joiner segments that bridge between them, are fully described. Features of the structure include: (1) A pseudoknot belt that circumscribes the molecule at its longitudinal midpoint; (2) two tetraloop-tetraloop receptor motifs at the peripheral edges of the structure; (3) an extensive minor groove triplex between the paired and joiner segments, P6-J6/6a and P3-J3/4, which provides the major interaction interface between the intron’s two primary domains (P4-P6 and P3-P9.0); (4) a six-nucleotide J8/7 single stranded element that adopts a μ-shaped structure and twists through the active site, making critical contacts to all three helical domains; and (5) an extensive base stacking architecture that realizes 90% of all possible stacking interactions. The intron structure was validated by hydroxyl radical footprinting, where strong correlation was observed between experimental and predicted solvent accessibility. Models of the pre-first and pre-second steps of intron splicing are proposed with full-sized tRNA exons. They suggest that the tRNA undergoes substantial angular motion relative to the intron between the two steps of splicing.

Keywords: RNA structure, ribozyme, self-splicing intron, X-ray crystallography, Azoarcus, tRNA
Abstract

Acknowledgments

We thank C. Hobartner and R. Micura for the gift of a 2′-seleno-methyl substituted dCIRC oligonucleotide, M. Becker and the staff of the X-25 beamline at Brookhaven NSLS for assistance with data collection, J. Pflugrath for helpful discussions, C. Berman for assistance with pre-1S modeling, and the staff in the Yale Center for Structural Biology for extensive technical assistance. We also thank L. Szewczak, J. Cochrane, R. Anderson, E. Westhof, and A. Lescoute-Philipps for comments on this manuscript. This work was supported by NSF grant MCB-0315329 and NIH grant GM54839 to S.A.S.

Acknowledgments

Notes

Article and publication are at http://www.rnajournal.org/cgi/doi/10.1261/rna.7140504.

Notes
Article and publication are at http://www.rnajournal.org/cgi/doi/10.1261/rna.7140504.

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