pubmed:abstractText |
While it is known that several trans -acting splicing factors are highly conserved between Schizosaccharomyces pombe and mammals, the roles of cis -acting signals have received comparatively little attention. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, sequences downstream from the branch point are not required prior to the first transesterification reaction, whereas in mammals the polypyrimidine tract and, in some introns, the 3' AG dinucleotide are critical for initial recognition of an intron. We have investigated the contribution of these two sequence elements to splicing in S.pombe. To determine the stage at which the polypyrimidine tract functions, we analyzed the second intron of the cdc2 gene (cdc 2-Int2), in which pyrimidines span the entire interval between the branch point and 3' splice site. Our data indicate that substitution of a polypurine tract results in accumulation of linear pre-mRNA, while expanding the polypyrimidine tract enhances splicing efficiency, as in mammals. To examine the role of the AG dinucleotide in cdc 2-Int2 splicing, we mutated the 3' splice junction in both the wild-type and pyrimidine tract variant RNAs. These changes block the first transesterification reaction, as in a subset of mammalian introns. However, in contrast to the situation in mammals, we were unable to rescue the first step of splicing in a 3' splice site mutant by expanding the polypyrimidine tract. Mutating the terminal G in the third intron of the nda 3 gene (nda 3-Int3) also blocks the first transesterification reaction, suggesting that early recognition of the 3' splice site is a general property of fission yeast introns. Counter to earlier work with an artificial intron, it is not possible to restore the first step of splicing in cdc 2-Int2 and nda 3-Int3 3' splice site mutants by introducing compensatory changes in U1 snRNA. These results highlight the diversity and probable redundancy of mechanisms for identifying the 3' ends of introns.
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pubmed:affiliation |
Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Case Western Reserve University, School of Medicine, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106-4960, USA.
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