BN - Splicing Flashcards
1.
How is the spliceosome loaded during transcription?
Co-transcriptional loading, where RNAP II carries proteins involved in splicing, and the spliceosome assembles as the gene is transcribed
What are some features of the spliceosome? (5)
1) Comprised of both RNA (5) and protein (150)
2) RNA component: small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs)
- U1 U2 U4 U5 U6
3) Each RNA is complexed with 6-10 proteins to form small nuclear ribonuclear proteins (snRNPs)
4) Different complexes come in at different stages
5) Uses ATP
What occurs during spliceosomal splicing? (4)
1. First U1 snRNP binds to 5’ splice site
- U1 snRNP consists of U1 snRNA + proteins
2. BBP binds at branch point
U2AF65/35 binds at 3’ splice site
3. U2 snRNP binds to branch site
- Aided by U2AF
- Displaces BBP
Branch point A residue is excluded creating a single nucleotide bulge
4. U4,5 and 6 snRNPs now bind
- The U2AF proteins are displaced
- This brings the 5’splice site close to the branch point and 3’splice site
What are features related with self-splicing? (6)
- Can occur in rare introns in which the intron codes for a ribozyme which splices itself out of the RNA
- The ribozyme structure mimics the functions of the spliceosome and shares similarity in reaction mechanisms
- Hairpin and hammerhead structures
- Could be considered the first parasitic elements
- Can re-organise elements of genes to produce more than one product from a limited RNA genome
- Exon-exon shuffling can have an evolutionary effect
What is Alternative splicing and how does it occur?
Alternative splicing can result in multiple products arising from the same gene
Alternative splicing
- A process by which the RNA can be spliced in more than one way
- This can result in the formation of 2 or more proteins from the same gene
The 1st gene known to be alternatively spliced
- Calcitonin/Calcitonin Gene Related Peptide (CGRP)
What is RNA editing and what is an example?
A process in which information changes at the level of mRNA
Codon changed at the RNA level
E.g CAA → UAA
- UAA is a stop codon and so alters structure
Not a mistake (specific controlled reaction)
What are examples of Substitution editing?
- Cytidine deaminases convert a C in the RNA to uracil (U)
- Adenosine deaminases convert an A to inosin (I) which the ribosome translates as a G
Both enzyme classes recognise target nucleotide sequence
What are 3 features of Insertion/deletion editing?
- Mediated by guide RNA molecules
- These base-pair with RNA
- Serve as template for addition/removal of nucleotides
How is Cytosine converted to Uracil? And where may this occur?
Cytidine deaminase action
- Amino group on nucleotide ring is removed and converted to carbonyl
Also occurs in glutamate receptors
- transmitter gated ion channel (in nervous system)
- here there is an A to I (inosine) change
Catalysed by ADAR
→ Alters the Ca2+ permeability of the channel