Literature DB >> 15175762

Crystal structure of a self-splicing group I intron with both exons.

Peter L Adams1, Mary R Stahley, Anne B Kosek, Jimin Wang, Scott A Strobel.   

Abstract

The discovery of the RNA self-splicing group I intron provided the first demonstration that not all enzymes are proteins. Here we report the X-ray crystal structure (3.1-A resolution) of a complete group I bacterial intron in complex with both the 5'- and the 3'-exons. This complex corresponds to the splicing intermediate before the exon ligation step. It reveals how the intron uses structurally unprecedented RNA motifs to select the 5'- and 3'-splice sites. The 5'-exon's 3'-OH is positioned for inline nucleophilic attack on the conformationally constrained scissile phosphate at the intron-3'-exon junction. Six phosphates from three disparate RNA strands converge to coordinate two metal ions that are asymmetrically positioned on opposing sides of the reactive phosphate. This structure represents the first splicing complex to include a complete intron, both exons and an organized active site occupied with metal ions.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15175762     DOI: 10.1038/nature02642

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  184 in total

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Authors:  Scott A Strobel; Peter L Adams; Mary R Stahley; Jimin Wang
Journal:  RNA       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 4.942

2.  Crystal structure of a group I intron splicing intermediate.

Authors:  Peter L Adams; Mary R Stahley; Michelle L Gill; Anne B Kosek; Jimin Wang; Scott A Strobel
Journal:  RNA       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 4.942

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5.  How do metal ions direct ribozyme folding?

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Review 8.  Two distinct catalytic strategies in the hepatitis δ virus ribozyme cleavage reaction.

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9.  A base triple in the Tetrahymena group I core affects the reaction equilibrium via a threshold effect.

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Review 10.  The structural and functional diversity of metabolite-binding riboswitches.

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