| Literature DB >> 7947794 |
A M Pyle1, S Moran, S A Strobel, T Chapman, D H Turner, T R Cech.
Abstract
There is a phylogenetically conserved G.U pair at the 5'-splice site of group I introns. When this is mutagenized to a G-C pair, splicing of these introns is greatly reduced. We have used a ribozyme derived from the Tetrahymena group I intron to compare the binding and reactivity of oligonucleotides that form either a G.U or a G-C pair at this position. Ribozyme binding of oligonucleotides at 42 degrees C was measured by native gel electrophoresis and equilibrium dialysis. Binding of GGCCCUCC (C(-1)P), which base-pairs with the ribozyme guide sequence to form a G-C at the cleavage site, was 10-fold weaker than the binding of GGCCCUCU (U(-1)P), which maintains the conserved G.U pair at the cleavage site. This is surprising since a terminal G-C enhances the binding between oligonucleotides by 20-fold relative to a terminal G.U. Thermal denaturation studies indicate that C(-1)P and several analogs with deoxy substitutions bind the guide-sequence oligonucleotide, GGAGGGAAA, as strongly as they bind the ribozyme. In contrast, U(-1)P binds 240-fold more strongly to the ribozyme than to GGAGGGAAA, a difference that is decreased by deoxy substitutions. Thus, while U(-1)P binds the ribozyme through a combination of base-pairing and specific 2-OH and other tertiary interactions, C(-1)P may bind by base-pairing alone. The substrate GGCCCUCCAAAAA (C(-1)S) is cleaved 100-fold more slowly than GGCCCUCUAAAAA (U(-1)S) and also has a higher propensity to be cleaved at the wrong nucleotide position.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1994 PMID: 7947794 DOI: 10.1021/bi00250a040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162