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In vivo facilitation of Tetrahymena group I intron splicing in Escherichia coli pre-ribosomal RNA.
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1995
Year
Ribosomal RnaGeneticsRna SplicingMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsSplicing VariantPre-ribosomal RnaProtein SynthesisVivo FacilitationTranscriptional RegulationProtein FoldingRna ProcessingRna Structure PredictionRna BiologyDna ReplicationTetrahymena GroupRna TransportGene ExpressionStructural BiologyBiologyVivo Rate EnhancementNatural SciencesNucleic Acid BiochemistryRna FoldingMicrobiologyMedicine
The observation that the large ribosomal RNA intron of Tetrahymena is spliced 20-50-fold more rapidly in vivo than in vitro (Brehm SL, Cech TR, 1983, Biochemistry 22:2390-2397; Bass BL, Cech TR, 1984, Nature 308:820-826) suggests facilitation of RNA folding in vivo. To determine whether a specific group I splicing factor is required in Tetrahymena, the intron was inserted into the analogous position of the Escherichia coli 23S rRNA. We report that the intron is rapidly excised from pre-rRNA in bacteria and that the magnitude of the in vivo rate enhancement is similar to that in Tetrahymena. These results demonstrate that a species-specific protein is not required. Instead, a common mechanism of assisting RNA folding is sufficient to accelerate the removal of self-splicing introns from ribosomal RNA.