1kxk
From Proteopedia
Crystal Structure of a RNA Molecule Containing Domain 5 and 6 of the Yeast ai5g Group II Self-splicing Intron
Overview
Group II self-splicing introns catalyze autoexcision from precursor RNA transcripts by a mechanism strikingly similar to that of the spliceosome, an RNA-protein assembly responsible for splicing together the protein-coding parts of most eukaryotic pre-mRNAs. Splicing in both cases initiates via nucleophilic attack at the 5' splice site by the 2' OH of a conserved intron adenosine residue, creating a branched (lariat) intermediate. Here, we describe the crystal structure at 3.0 A resolution of a 70-nucleotide RNA containing the catalytically essential domains 5 and 6 of the yeast ai5gamma group II self-splicing intron, revealing an unexpected two-nucleotide bulged structure around the branch-point adenosine in domain 6.
About this Structure
Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.
Reference
Structural insights into group II intron catalysis and branch-site selection., Zhang L, Doudna JA, Science. 2002 Mar 15;295(5562):2084-8. Epub 2002 Feb 21. PMID:11859154 Page seeded by OCA on Fri May 2 23:17:37 2008