L14 Eukaryotic Transcript Processing 2 Flashcards
Self-splicing introns
See onenote diagram
- RNA catalysed reaction compared to spliceosomal-based
- e.g. protozoan rRNA genes and some mitochondrial genes
The only way introns could’ve genetically survive over time is if they were self-splicing; introns are slightly negatively deleterious as it is essential interrupting genes
Two theories of intron evolution
- introns evolved and proliferated early but lost in some genes
- introns evolved late and are proliferating
- to address this, comparison of intron positions in related genes in closely related species (orthologues)
Intron evolution - orthologue comparison
See onenote diagram
- intron position can vary
Intron splicing, gain, loss
See onenote diagram
- spliceosomal intron splicing
- intron gain by reverse splicing
- intron loss
Intron Sliding
See onenote diagram
Change in intron position
Intron gets inserted in a concerted reaction but in a different position that is close to the original site
Sequence of intron exactly the same BUT now in a different position in the gene
Intron function
See onenote diagram
Introns may code for snoRNA
- small nucleolar RNA
- generally transcribed by RNA pol2
- modify bases in rRNA and tRNA
- introns can have genes in them, usually non-coding genes
- snoRNA sitting in introns
- intron lariat needs to be linearised and processed to give mature snoRNA
Alternative splicing
snoRNA
Some snoRNA can exists as a single gene -monocistronic
- Need exonuclease activity to trim them
Back to back snoRNA - polycistronic
- Each snoRNA needs to be separated and trimmed
- Need endonuclease activity to separate them
- Need exonuclease activity to trim them
Specific snoRNA structure
- Can bind to their target sequence
- Complementary to target RNA
- As snoRNA is part of the snorp protein complex, the enzyme in the snorps modifies the rRNA and tRNA
SV40
Differential intron splicing
- T gene has two different forms - Within the intron, there is an in-frame stop codon => makes truncated protein, small t-antigen - If intron spliced out, the two exons are spliced together and makes the large t-antigen - Large t-antigen causes cells that are infected by SV40 to undergo transformation (neoplasty transformation), cells become immortalised (like cancerous cells), large t-antigen drives proliferation of these cells - Usually the immune system recognises those cells or the cells recognise it themselves and they tend to die (apoptosis) - Small t-antigen blocks apoptopic mechanism, cell cannot kill itself - From SV40 infection, cells become cancerous and makes lots of SV40 by using both small and large t-antigen
Drosophila DSCAM
See onenote diagram
Orthologue of down syndrome cell adhesion molecule
24 alternatively spliced exons
38,016 combinations of mature mRNAs
Two roles:
1. neural patterning and antigen recognition
Neural patterning:
- self or non-self recognition
- neurite self-avoidance
These molecules are cell surface molecules, involved in identifying cells to other cells - cells have slightly different properties as they have different exons in them e.g. two neurons can recognise that they’re different as they have different molecules on their surface
Transcript splicing - repression and activation
See OneNote diagram
If the stochiometry of the protein at the end gives you what you need, then no further regulation is required
BUT if you want a specific form in a specific cell type then it needs to be regulated
Repression
Protein binds to the intron as it recognises the sequence to the RNA and blocks the spliceosome complex from binding and cutting that intron
Activation
- Intron not spliced out efficiently - Activator protein binds to intron and interacts with the spliceosome complex, stabilises it, intron can be spliced
Transcript processing - RNA editing
see apo-B example in onenote
- post-transcriptional modification of mRNA sequence
- DNA sequence differs from mRNA sequence
- protein sequence differs from that predicted from DNA sequence
2 mechanisms:
- nucleotide modification (site-specific deamination)
- nucleotide insertion by guide RNAs
more common than originally thought but not as common as some would have us believe
RNA editing - nucleotide modification by specific enzymes
Cytosine deamination by cytidine deaminase:
- cytosine to uracil
Adenine deamination by adenine deaminase (ADAR):
- adenine to inosine
- Inosine has altered base pair properties, will base pair will A,C,G => tRNA can recognises triplet of codons due to inosine
RNA editing - insertion or deletion of U’s
See onenote diagram
- RNA in mitochondria of some protozoans
- Protein looks nothing like what you predicted if you looked at the coding DNA
RNA editing - carried about by guide RNAs
See onenote diagram
- base pairing mediated (to maintain reading frame)
Post-transcription - RNA localisation
See onenote diagram
- pre-mRNA is retained in the nucleus
- mature mRNA exported out of the nucleus
- proteins specifically bound to fully processed mature mRNA signal transport out of the nucleus
Will affect whether the protein will be made
Can maintain mature RNA in nucleus and block gene expression
Control when it is transported into the cytoplasm, controls when translation occurs