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Page 1: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing
Page 2: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Outline Introduction The chemistry of RNA Splicing The Splicing Machinery Splicing Pathway Alternative Splicing Exon Shuffling RNA Editing mRNA Transport

Page 3: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Introduction

In almost all bacterial and phage genes, the opening-reading frame is a single stretch of condons with no break.

But most of the eukaryotic genes are mosaic , the coding sequences are separated by noncoding sequences

Page 4: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Exons : the coding sequences Intro

ns : the intervening sequences( uncoding streches )

(1)The number of introns found within a gene varies enormously.

(2)The sizes of the exons and introns vary..

Page 5: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Critical questions

How are the introns and exons distinguished from each other?

How are introns removed?How are exons joined with high

precision?

Page 6: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

※The primary transcripts (pre-mRNA) must have their introns removed before they can be translated into protein

※ Introns are removed from the pre-mRNA by a process called RNA Splicing.

※ RNA Splicing converts the pre-mRNA into mature messanger RNA.

Page 7: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing
Page 8: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The chemistry of RNA Splicing

Page 9: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The borders between introns and exons are marked by specific nucleotide sequences within the pre-mRNAs

Sequence within the RNA determine where splicing occurs.

Page 10: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Specific nucleotide sequences within the pre-mRNA:

5’splice site : the exon-intron boundary at the 5’ end of the intron(GU)

3’ splice site : the exon-intron boundary at the 3’ end of the intron(AG)

Branch point site : an A close to the 3’ end of the intron, which is followed by a polypyrimidine tract (A)

Page 11: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Figure 13-2 The consensus sequences at the intron -exon boundary

Page 12: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The intron is removed in a Form called a Lariat (套索 ) as the Flanking Exons

are joined

Two successive transesterification reactions

Page 13: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The OH of the conserved A attacks the phosphoryl group of the conserved G. Exon is released and the 5’-end of the intron forms a three-way junction structure.

↖Three-way junction

Page 14: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The structure of three-way function

Page 15: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

※The newly liberated 3`OH of the 5`exon attacks the phosphoryl group at the 3`splice site.

※ The newly liberated intron form a lariat.

Page 16: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

○○

○◇ ◇

Overview

Page 17: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Exons from different RNA molecules can be fused by Trans-splicing

Trans-splicing: the process in which two exons carried on different RNA molecules can be spliced together.

The Difference:

A Y-shaped branch structure is formed instead of a lariat.

Page 18: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Trans-splicing

Y-shaped branch

Page 19: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

THE SPLICESOME THE SPLICESOME MACHINERYMACHINERY

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RNA Splicing is carried out by a large complex called the spliceosome

The spliceosome comprises about 150 proteins and 5 snRNAs

It is believed that the RNA components rather than the proteins carry out the functions of the spliceosome.

Page 21: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Components involved:

snRNAs: The five RNAs (U1, U2, U4, U5, and U6) are called small nuclear RNAs .

snRNPs:The complexes of snRNA and proteins are called small nuclear ribonuclear proteins.

Other proteins.

Page 22: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Three roles of snRNPs in splicing

Recognizing the 5’ splice site and the branch site.

Bringing those sites together.

Catalyzing (or helping to catalyze) the RNA cleavage and rejoining reaction.

RNA-RNA, RNA-protein and protein-protein interactions are all important during splicing.

Page 23: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Some RNA-RNA hybrids formed during the splicing reaction

Page 24: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Splicing pathwaysSplicing pathways

Page 25: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Assembly, rearrangement, and catalysis within

the spliceosome: the splicing pathway Assembly pathway:

Formation of early (E) complex

Formation of A complex

Formation of B complex Rearrangement:

Formation of C complex Catalysis:

Formation of the active site

Page 26: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Formation of E complex: one subunit of U2AF binds to Py tract and the other to the 3’ splice site. The former subunits interacts with BBP and helps it bind to the branch point

←E complex

←A complex

U2 binds to the branch site, and then A complex is formed

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U4, U5 and U6 form the tri- snRNP Particle With the entry of the tri- snRNP, the A complex is converted into the B complex.

Tri- snRNP particle↗

B complex←

Page 28: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

※U1 leaves the complex, and U6 replaces it at the 5’ splice site.※ U4 is released from the complex, allowing U6 to interact with U2 This arrangement called the C complex

Page 29: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Formation of the C complex produces the active site.

Formation of the active site juxtaposes the 5’ splice site of the pre-mRNA and the branch site, allowing the branched A residue to attack the 5’ splice site to accomplish the first transesterfication reaction.

U5 snRNP helps to bring the two exons together, and aids the second transesterification reaction

Release of the mRNA product and the snRNPs

Page 30: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

E complex

A complex

B complex

Overview of splicesome -mediated splicing reactions

C complex

Tri- snRNP particle

Page 31: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Self-splicing introns reveal that RNA can catalyze RNA splicing

Self-splicing introns: the intron itself folds into a specific conformation within the precursor RNA and catalyzes the chemistry of its own release and the exon ligation.

Practical definition for self-splicing introns: the introns that can remove themselves from RNAs in the test tube in the absence of any proteins or other RNAs.

Page 32: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

There are two classes of self-splicing introns, group I and group II self-splicing introns in eukaryotes.

They are not enzymes, because they mediate only one round of RNA prodessing.

Page 33: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

TABLE 13-1 Three class of RNA SplicingClass Abundance Mechanism Catalytic

Machinery

Nuclear pre-

mRNA

Very common; used for most eukaryotic genes

Two transesterificatio

n reactions; branch site A

Major spliceosome

Group II introns

Rare; some eu- Karyotic genes from organelles

and prokaryotes

Same as pre-mRNA

RNA enzyme encoded by

intron (ribozyme)

Group I introns

Rare; nuclear rRNA in some eukaryotics,

organlle genes, and a few prokaryotic genes

Two transesterific-

ation reactions; exogenous G

Same as group II introns

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Group Ⅱ Introns

The chemistry of group II intron splicing and RNA intermediates produced are the same as that of the nuclear pre-mRNA

Page 35: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Group Ⅰ Introns

Group Ⅰ Introns release a linear rather a lariat.

They use a free G nucleotide or nucleoside instead of a branch site A residue.

The two-step transesterification reactions are the same as that of splicing of the group II intron and pre-mRNA introns.

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Page 37: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Three forms of splicing

Page 38: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

How does spliceosome find the splice sites reliably?

The active site of the spliceosome is only formed on RNA sequences that pass the test of being recognized by multiple elements during spliceosome assembly.

Yet, the problem of appropriate splice-site recognition in the pre-mRNA remains formidable:

It seems inevitable that many errors would occur

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Two kinds of splice-site recognition errors:

Splice sites can be skipped.

“Pseudo” splice sites could be mistakenly recognized, particularly the 3’ splice site.

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Errors produced by mistakes in splice-site selection

Page 41: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Two ways in which the accuracy of splice-site selection can be enhanced :

First, it assembles on the sites soon after they have been synthesized.

Second, there are other proteins---SR proteins---that bind near legitimate splice sites and help recruit the splicing machinery to those sites.

So-called SR proteins bind to sequences called exonic splicing enhancers(ESEs)

Page 42: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

SR proteins, bound to exonic splicing enhancers (ESEs),

interact with components of splicing machinery, recruiting

them to the nearby splice sites.

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Alternative Splicing

Page 44: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Single genes can produce multiple products by alternative splicing.

Exons can be extended ,or skipped, also, introns can be retained in some messages.

Page 45: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Single genes can produce multiple products by alternative splicing.

Drosophila DSCAM gene can produces 38016 different mRNA and proteins.

Page 46: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Exons can be extended ,or skipped, also, introns can be retained in some messages.

Page 47: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The previous mechanisms described that exons are not skipped and splice sits not ignored. So, how does alternative splicing occur so often?

The answer is that some splice sites are used only some of the time ,leading to the production of different versions of the RNA from different transcriptions of the same gene.

Page 48: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

There are two forms of alternative splicing :

Regulated alternative splicing: different forms are generated at different times, under different conditions, or in different cell or tissue types. Constitutive alternative splicing: more than one product is always made from the transcribed gene. (See picture 13-17 for details)

Page 49: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Constitutive alternative splicing in the troponin T antigen (generating two different T- ag )

Page 50: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Alternative splicing is regulated by activators and repressors

Proteins regulating splicing bind to specific sites called Exonic (or intronic) splicing enhancers

(ESE or ISE) or silencers( ESS or ISS)

The former enhance and the latter repress splicing.

Proteins that regulate splicing bind to these specific sites for their actions.

Page 51: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Repressors and activators are respond for alternative splicing,As a result, a particular exon is chosen in a certain cell.

Page 52: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Alternative splicing as a way in which multiple protein product can be produced from a single gene, these different proteins are called

isoforms.

Some gene that encodes only a single functional protein also show alternative splicing.

Why???

As a way of switching expression of the gene on and off (by two pathway)

Page 53: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Inhibition of splicing by hnRNPI

Binds at each end of theexon and conceals it.

Coats the entireExon.

Page 54: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

A small group of intron are spliced by minor spliceosome

This spliceosome works on a minority of exons, and those have distinct splice-site sequence.

Using a low- abundance form of splicing.

The chemical pathway is the same as the major spliceosome.

(Read page 400 for more details)

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Exon Shuffling

Page 56: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Exons are shuffled by recombination to produce gene

encoding new proteins

Why introns are rare

— almost nonexistent —in bacteria?

Are they lost or never existent?

Why does it happen?

Page 57: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Two Models

Introns early model – introns existed in all organisms but have been lost from bacteria.

(Bacteria become gene- rich responding to selective pressure)

Intron late model – introns never existed in bacteria but rather arose later in evolution.

Page 58: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Advantages of the presence of introns:

First, the presence of introns, and the need to remove them, allow for alternative splicing which can generate multiple proteins from a single gene.

Second, having the coding sequences of genes divided into several exons allow new genes to be created by reshuffling exons.

Page 59: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

The evidence of The borders between exons and introns within a given

gene often coincide with the boundaries between domains within the protein encoded that gene.

The borders between exons and introns within a given gene often coincide with the boundaries between domains within the protein encoded by that gene.

Many genes, and the proteins they encode, have apparently arisen during evolution in part via exon duplication and divergence.

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RNA EditingRNA Editing

Page 61: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

RNA editing is another way of changing the sequence of an mRNA

RNA Editing is another mechanism that allows an RNA to be changed after transcription so as to encode a different protein from that encoded by the gene.

There are two mechanisms that mediate editing:

Site-specific deamination

Guide RNA-directed uridine insertion or deletion

Page 62: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

A tissue- specific manner by deamination of a specific cytodine to generate a uridine.

Page 63: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Guide RNA-directed uridine insertion or deletion.

※Multiple Us are inserted into specific region of mRNAs after transcription (or US may be deleted).※ This form of RNA editing is found in the mitochondria of trypanosomes.※ Us are inserted into the message by so-called guide RNAs(gRNAs).

Page 64: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Three regions of gRNA

editing region – determining exactly where the Us will be inserted

anchor– directing the gRNAs to the region of mRNAs it will edit.

poly-U stretch↑ ↑↑

↑ ↑

Page 65: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

RNA ligase→

RNA-DNA duplex with looped out single strand regions →

Page 66: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

RNA Transcription

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Page 68: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Once processed, mRNA is packaged and exported from the nucleus into the cytoplasm for translation

All the fully processed mRNAs are transported to the cytoplasm for translation into proteins.

So, how are RNA selected and transport achieved???

Page 69: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

Movement from the nucleus to the cytoplasm is an active and carefully regulated process.

The damaged, misprocessed and liberated introns are retained in the nucleus and degraded.

A typical mature mRNA carries a collection of proteins that identifies it as being ready for transport.

Export takes place through the nuclear pore complex.

Page 70: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing

※Critical concepts: exon, intron, RNA splicing, trans-splicing, self-splicing, RNA editing

※ The chemistry and pathway of RNA splicing ※ The ways to enhance accuracy※ The mechanism of selecting RNA to be transported※ Understanding ways to increase diversity of proteins

generated by the same gene: (1)Alternative splicing (most important of all) (2)Exon shuffling (3)RNA editing (more economic?)

Summary

Page 71: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing
Page 72: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing
Page 73: Outline  Introduction  The chemistry of RNA Splicing  The Splicing Machinery  Splicing Pathway  Alternative Splicing  Exon Shuffling  RNA Editing