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Splicing (genetics)



 
 
In molecular biology
Molecular biology

Molecular biology is the study of biology at a molecule level. The field overlaps with other areas of biology and chemistry, particularly genetics and biochemistry....
, splicing is a modification of an RNA
RNA

Ribonucleic acid is a type of molecule that consists of a long chain of nucleotide units. Each nucleotide consists of a nucleobase, a ribose sugar, and a phosphate....
 after transcription
Transcription (genetics)

Transcription is the synthesis of RNA under the direction of DNA. RNA synthesis, or transcription, is the process of transcribing DNA nucleotide sequence information into RNA sequence information....
, in which introns are removed and exons are joined. This is needed for the typical eukaryotic messenger RNA
Messenger RNA

Messenger ribonucleic acid is a molecule of RNA encoding a chemical "blueprint" for a protein product. mRNA is transcription from a DNA template, and carries coding information to the sites of protein synthesis: the ribosomes....
 before it can be used to produce a correct protein through translation. For many eukaryotic introns, splicing is done in a series of reactions which are catalyzed
Catalysis

Catalysis is the process in which the reaction rate of a chemical reaction is either increased or decreased by means of a chemical substance known as a catalyst....
 by the spliceosome
Spliceosome

A spliceosome is a complex of specialized RNA and protein subunits that removes introns from a Transcription pre-Messenger RNA segment. This process is generally referred to as splicing ....
, a complex of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP
SnRNP

snRNPs , or small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, are particles that combine with pre-mRNA and various proteins to form spliceosomes . SnRNPs "recognize" the places along a strand of pre-mRNA and are essential in the removal of introns....
s), but there are also self-splicing introns.


ral methods of RNA splicing occur in nature: the type of splicing depends on the structure of the spliced intron and the catalysts required for splicing to occur.

ceosomal introns often reside in eukaryotic protein-coding genes.






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In molecular biology
Molecular biology

Molecular biology is the study of biology at a molecule level. The field overlaps with other areas of biology and chemistry, particularly genetics and biochemistry....
, splicing is a modification of an RNA
RNA

Ribonucleic acid is a type of molecule that consists of a long chain of nucleotide units. Each nucleotide consists of a nucleobase, a ribose sugar, and a phosphate....
 after transcription
Transcription (genetics)

Transcription is the synthesis of RNA under the direction of DNA. RNA synthesis, or transcription, is the process of transcribing DNA nucleotide sequence information into RNA sequence information....
, in which introns are removed and exons are joined. This is needed for the typical eukaryotic messenger RNA
Messenger RNA

Messenger ribonucleic acid is a molecule of RNA encoding a chemical "blueprint" for a protein product. mRNA is transcription from a DNA template, and carries coding information to the sites of protein synthesis: the ribosomes....
 before it can be used to produce a correct protein through translation. For many eukaryotic introns, splicing is done in a series of reactions which are catalyzed
Catalysis

Catalysis is the process in which the reaction rate of a chemical reaction is either increased or decreased by means of a chemical substance known as a catalyst....
 by the spliceosome
Spliceosome

A spliceosome is a complex of specialized RNA and protein subunits that removes introns from a Transcription pre-Messenger RNA segment. This process is generally referred to as splicing ....
, a complex of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP
SnRNP

snRNPs , or small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, are particles that combine with pre-mRNA and various proteins to form spliceosomes . SnRNPs "recognize" the places along a strand of pre-mRNA and are essential in the removal of introns....
s), but there are also self-splicing introns.

Pre Mrna To Mrna

Splicing pathways

Several methods of RNA splicing occur in nature: the type of splicing depends on the structure of the spliced intron and the catalysts required for splicing to occur.

Spliceosomal introns

Spliceosomal introns often reside in eukaryotic protein-coding genes. Within the intron, a 3' splice site, 5' splice site, and branch site are required for splicing. Splicing is catalyzed by the spliceosome
Spliceosome

A spliceosome is a complex of specialized RNA and protein subunits that removes introns from a Transcription pre-Messenger RNA segment. This process is generally referred to as splicing ....
 which is a large RNA-protein complex composed of five small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNP
SnRNP

snRNPs , or small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, are particles that combine with pre-mRNA and various proteins to form spliceosomes . SnRNPs "recognize" the places along a strand of pre-mRNA and are essential in the removal of introns....
s, pronounced 'snurps' ). The RNA components of snRNPs interact with the intron and may be involved in catalysis. Two types of spliceosomes have been identified (the major and minor) which contain different snRNP
SnRNP

snRNPs , or small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, are particles that combine with pre-mRNA and various proteins to form spliceosomes . SnRNPs "recognize" the places along a strand of pre-mRNA and are essential in the removal of introns....
s.
  • Major
The major spliceosome splices introns containing GU at the 5' splice site and AG at the 3' splice site. It is composed of the U1
U1 spliceosomal RNA

U1 spliceosomal RNA is a small nuclear RNA component of the spliceosome . Its 5' end forms Complementarity base pairs with the 5' splice junction, thus defining the 5' donor site of an intron....
, U2
U2 spliceosomal RNA

U2 spliceosomal RNA is a small nuclear RNA component of the spliceosome . Complementarity binding between U2 snRNA and the branchpoint sequence of the intron results in the bulging out of an unpaired adenosine, on the BPS, which initiates a Nucleophile attack at the intronic 5' splice site, thus starting the first of two transesterifi...
, U4
U4 spliceosomal RNA

U4 small nuclear RNA is a non-coding RNA component of the major U2-dependent spliceosome. It forms a duplex with U6 spliceosomal RNA, and with each splicing round, it is displaced from U6 in an ATP-dependent manner, allowing U6 to re-fold and create the active site for splicing catalysis....
, U5
U5 spliceosomal RNA

U5 RNA is a non-coding RNA that is a component of both types of known spliceosome. The precise function of this molecule is unknown, though it is known that the 5' loop is required for splice site selection and p220 binding, and that both the 3' stem-loop and the Sm site are important for Sm protein binding and cap methylation....
, and U6
U6 spliceosomal RNA

U6 snRNA is a non-coding RNA that is a component of the spliceosome which is involved in splicing pre-mRNA. The putative secondary structure consensus base pairing is confined to a short 5' stem-loop, but U6 snRNA is thought to form extensive base-pair interactions with U4 spliceosomal RNA....
 snRNP
SnRNP

snRNPs , or small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, are particles that combine with pre-mRNA and various proteins to form spliceosomes . SnRNPs "recognize" the places along a strand of pre-mRNA and are essential in the removal of introns....
s and is active in the nucleus.
  • E Complex-U1 binds to the GU sequence at the 5' splice site, along with accessory proteins/enzymes ASF/SF2, U2AF (binds at the Py-AG site), SF1/BBP (BBP=Branch Binding Protein);
  • A Complex-U2 binds to the branch site, and ATP is hydrolyzed;
  • B1 Complex-U5/U4/U6 trimer binds, and the U5 binds exons at the 5' site, with U6 binding to U2;
  • B2 Complex-U1 is released, U5 shifts from exon to intron and the U6 binds at the 5' splice site;
  • C1 Complex-U4 is released, U6/U2 catalyzes transesterification, U5 binds exon at 3' splice site, and the 5' site is cleaved, resulting in the formation of the lariat;
  • C2 Complex-U2/U5/U6 remain bound to the lariat, and the 3' site is cleaved and exons are ligated using ATP hydrolysis. The spliced RNA is released and the lariat debranches.
This type of splicing is termed canonical splicing or termed the lariat pathway, which accounts for more than 99% of splicing. By contrast, when the intronic flanking sequences do not follow the GU-AG rule, noncanonical splicing is said to occur (see "minor spliceosome" below).
  • Minor
The minor spliceosome
Minor spliceosome

The minor spliceosome is a ribonucleoprotein complex that catalyses the removal of an atypical class of spliceosomal introns from eukaryotic messenger RNAs in plant, insects, vertebrates and some fungi ....
 is very similar to the major spliceosome, however it splices out rare introns with different splice site sequences. While the minor and major spliceosomes contain the same U5 snRNP
SnRNP

snRNPs , or small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, are particles that combine with pre-mRNA and various proteins to form spliceosomes . SnRNPs "recognize" the places along a strand of pre-mRNA and are essential in the removal of introns....
, the minor spliceosome has different, but functionally analogous snRNPs for U1, U2, U4, and U6, which are respectively called U11
U11 spliceosomal RNA

The U11 spliceosomal RNA is a non-coding RNA that together with U4atac/U6atac, U5, and U12 snRNAs and associated proteins, forms a spliceosome that cleaves a divergent class of low-abundance pre-mRNA introns....
, U12
U12 minor spliceosomal RNA

U12 minor spliceosomal RNA is formed from U12 small nuclear , together with U4atac/U6atac, U5 snRNA, and U11 snRNAs and associated proteins, forms a spliceosome that cleaves a Genetic divergence class of low-abundance pre-mRNA introns....
, U4atac, and U6atac. Like the major spliceosome, it is only found in the nucleus.
  • Trans-splicing
Trans-splicing
Trans-splicing

Trans-splicing is a special form of Messenger RNA in eukaryotes where exons from two different primary RNA transcripts are joined end to end and Ligase....
 is a form of splicing that joins two exons that are not within the same RNA transcript.


Self-splicing

Self-splicing occurs for rare introns that form a ribozyme
Ribozyme

A ribozyme is an RNA molecule that catalyzes a chemical reaction. Many natural ribozymes catalyze either the hydrolysis of one of their own phosphodiester bonds, or the hydrolysis of bonds in other RNAs, but they have also been found to catalyze the aminotransferase activity of the ribosome....
, performing the functions of the spliceosome by RNA alone.
There are three kinds of self-splicing introns, Group I
Group I catalytic intron

Group I catalytic intron are large self-splicing ribozymes. They catalyze their own excision from mRNA, tRNA and rRNA precursors in a wide range of organisms....
, Group II
Group II intron

Group II intron is a class of self-catalytic ribozymes and retroelements found in rRNA, tRNA, mRNA of organelles in fungi, plants, protists, and bacteria....
 and Group III
Group III intron

Group III intron is a class of introns found in mRNA genes of chloroplasts in euglenoid protists. They have a conventional Group II intron dVI with a bulged adenosine, a streamlined dI, no dII-dV, and a relaxed splice site consensus....
. Group I and II introns perform splicing similar to the spliceosome without requiring any protein. This similarity suggests that Group I and II introns may be evolutionarily related to the spliceosome. Self-splicing may also be very ancient, and may have existed in an RNA world that was present before protein. Although the two splicing mechanisms described below do not require any proteins to occur, 5 additional RNA molecules and over 50 proteins are used and hydrolyzes many ATP molecules. The splicing mechanisms use ATP in order to accurately splice mRNA's. If the cell were to not use any ATP's, the process would be highly inaccurate and many mistakes would occur.

Two transesterifications characterize the mechanism in which group I introns are spliced:
  1. 3'OH of a free guanine nucleoside (or one located in the intron) or a nucleotide cofactor (GMP, GDP, GTP) attacks phosphate at the 5' splice site.
  2. 3'OH of the 5'exon becomes a nucleophile and the second transesterification results in the joining of the two exons.


The mechanism in which group II introns are spliced (two transesterification reaction like group I introns) is as follows:
  1. The 2'OH of a specific adenosine in the intron attacks the 5' splice site, thereby forming the lariat
  2. The 3'OH of the 5' exon triggers the second transesterification at the 3' splice site thereby joining the exons together.


tRNA splicing

tRNA (also tRNA-like) splicing is another rare form of splicing that usually occurs in tRNA. The splicing reaction involves a different biochemistry than the spliceomsomal and self-splicing pathways. Ribonuclease
Ribonuclease

Ribonuclease is a type of nuclease that catalysis the degradation of RNA into smaller components. Ribonucleases can be divided into endoribonucleases and exoribonucleases, and comprise several sub-classes within the EC 2.7 and 3.1 classes of enzymes....
s cleave the RNA and ligases join the exons together.

Evolution

Splicing occurs in all the kingdom
Kingdom (biology)

In Biology taxonomy, kingdom or regnum is a taxonomic rank in either the highest rank, or the Rank below domain . Each kingdom is divided into smaller groups called Phylum ....
s or domain
Domain (biology)

In Biology taxonomy, a domain is the highest taxonomic rank of organisms, higher than a Kingdom . According to the three-domain system of Carl Woese, introduced in 1990, the Tree of life consists of three domains: Archaea, Bacteria and Eukaryota....
s of life, however, the extent and types of splicing can be very different between the major divisions. Eukaryote
Eukaryote

Animals, plants, fungus, and protists are eukaryotes , organisms whose Cell are organized into complex structures enclosed within Cell membrane....
s splice many protein-coding messenger RNAs and some non-coding RNA
Non-coding RNA

A non-coding RNA is a functional RNA molecule that is not Translation into a protein. Less-frequently used synonyms are non-protein-coding RNA , non-messenger RNA , small non-messenger RNA , functional RNA ....
s. Prokaryote
Prokaryote

The prokaryotes are a group of organisms that lack a cell nucleus , or any other cell membrane-bound organelles. They differ from the eukaryotes, which have a cell nucleus....
s, on the other hand, splice rarely and mostly non-coding RNAs. Another important difference between these two groups of organisms is that prokaryotes completely lack the correct spliceosomal pathway.

Because spliceosomal introns are not conserved in all species, there is debate concerning when spliceosomal splicing evolved. Two models have been proposed: the intron late and intron early models (see intron evolution
Intron

Introns, derived from the term "intragenic regions" and also called intervening sequence , are DNA regions in a gene that are not translated into proteins....
).

Biochemical mechanism

Two Step Splicing Reaction
Spliceosomal splicing and self-splicing involves a two-step biochemical process. Both steps involve transesterification
Transesterification

In organic chemistry, transesterification is the process of exchanging the alcohol group of an ester compound with another alcohol. These reactions are often catalyst by the addition of an acid or base ....
 reactions that occur between RNA nucleotides. tRNA splicing, however, is an exception and does not occur by transesterification.

Spliceosomal and self-splicing transesterification reactions occur via two sequential transesterification reactions. First, the 2'OH of a specific branch-point nucleotide within the intron that is defined during spliceosome assembly performs a nucleophilic attack on the first nucleotide of the intron at the 5' splice site forming the lariat intermediate. Second, the 3'OH of the released 5' exon then performs a nucleophilic attack at the last nucleotide of the intron at the 3' splice site thus joining the exons and releasing the intron lariat.

Alternative splicing


In many cases, the splicing process can create a range of unique proteins by varying the exon composition of the same messenger RNA. This phenomenon is then called alternative splicing
Alternative splicing

Alternative splicing is the RNA splicing variation mechanism in which the exons of the primary gene transcript, the pre-mRNA, are separated and reconnected so as to produce alternative ribonucleotide arrangements....
. Alternative splicing can occur in many ways. Exons can be extended or skipped, or introns can be retained.

Experimental manipulation of splicing

Splicing events can be experimentally altered by binding steric-blocking antisense oligos such as Morpholino
Morpholino

In molecular biology, a Morpholino is a molecule used to modify gene expression. Morpholino oligomers are an antisense technology used to block access of other molecules to specific sequences within nucleic acid....
s or Peptide nucleic acids to snRNP binding sites, to the branchpoint nucleotide that closes the lariat, or to splice-regulatory element binding sites.

Splicing errors

Common errors:
  • Mutation of a splice site resulting in loss of function of that site. Results in exposure of a premature stop codon, loss of an exon, or inclusion of an intron.
  • Mutation of a splice site reducing specificity. May result in variation in the splice location, causing insertion or deletion of amino acids, or most likely, a loss of the reading frame.
  • Transposition of a splice site, leading to inclusion or exclusion of more RNA than expected, resulting in longer or shorter exons.
Many splicing errors are safeguarded by a cellular quality control mechanism termed Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay [NMD].

Protein splicing

Not only pre-mRNA but also proteins can undergo splicing. Although the biomolecular mechanisms are different, the principle is the same, that parts of the protein, called intein
Intein

An intein is a segment of a protein that is able to excise itself and rejoin the remaining portions with a peptide bond. Inteins have also been called "protein introns"....
s instead of introns, are removed. The remaining parts, called exteins instead of exons, are fused together. Protein splicing has been observed in all sorts of organisms, including bacteria, archaea, plants, yeast and human.

See also

  • cDNA
  • Exon
    Exon

    An exon in a gene is a DNA or RNA sequence that is translated into RNA or protein. In contrast, an intron is a DNA sequence in the gene that is not translated....
  • Intron
    Intron

    Introns, derived from the term "intragenic regions" and also called intervening sequence , are DNA regions in a gene that are not translated into proteins....
  • Primary transcript
    Primary transcript

    A primary transcript is an RNA molecule that has not yet undergone any post-transcriptional modification after its transcription . For example, a precursor mRNA is a primary transcript that becomes a messenger RNA after processing, and a primary microRNA transcript becomes a microRNA after processing....
  • Spliceosome
    Spliceosome

    A spliceosome is a complex of specialized RNA and protein subunits that removes introns from a Transcription pre-Messenger RNA segment. This process is generally referred to as splicing ....
  • Minor spliceosome
    Minor spliceosome

    The minor spliceosome is a ribonucleoprotein complex that catalyses the removal of an atypical class of spliceosomal introns from eukaryotic messenger RNAs in plant, insects, vertebrates and some fungi ....


  • Cryptic splice site
    Cryptic splice site

    In molecular biology, splicing is a modification of an RNA after transcription , in whichintrons are removed and exons are joined.There are four sequence elements within introns of mammalian precursor mRNA which are required for efficient splicing....