Literature DB >> 16616935

An analysis of intron positions in relation to nucleotides, amino acids, and protein secondary structure.

Gordon S Whamond1, Janet M Thornton.   

Abstract

We present an analysis of intron positions in relation to nucleotides, amino acid residues, and protein secondary structure. Previous work has shown that intron sites in proteins are not randomly distributed with respect to secondary structures. Here we show that this preference can be almost totally explained by the nucleotide bias of splice site machinery, and may well not relate to protein stability or conformation at all. Each intron phase is preferentially associated with its own set of residues: phase 0 introns with lysine, glutamine, and glutamic acid before the intron, and valine after; phase 1 introns with glycine, alanine, valine, aspartic acid, and glutamic acid; and phase 2 introns with arginine, serine, lysine, and tryptophan. These preferences can be explained principally on the basis of nucleotide bias at intron locations, which is in accordance with previous literature. Although this work does not prove that introns are inserted into genomes at specific proto-splice sites, it shows that the nucleotide bias surrounding introns, however it originally occurred, explains the observed correlations between introns and protein secondary structure.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16616935     DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2006.03.029

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  8 in total

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3.  IntDb: A comprehensive database for classified introns of saccharomyces & human.

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4.  Detection and analysis of alternative splicing in Yarrowia lipolytica reveal structural constraints facilitating nonsense-mediated decay of intron-retaining transcripts.

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5.  Cryptic splice sites and split genes.

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6.  An overabundance of phase 0 introns immediately after the start codon in eukaryotic genes.

Authors:  Henrik Nielsen; Rasmus Wernersson
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2006-10-11       Impact factor: 3.969

7.  The relationship between gene isoform multiplicity, number of exons and protein divergence.

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8.  Finding exonic islands in a sea of non-coding sequence: splicing related constraints on protein composition and evolution are common in intron-rich genomes.

Authors:  Tobias Warnecke; Joanna L Parmley; Laurence D Hurst
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2008-02-07       Impact factor: 13.583

  8 in total

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