نتایج جستجو برای: group i intron

تعداد نتایج: 1933205  

Journal: :RNA 2000
S B Rho S A Martinis

The imported mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (NAM2p) and a mitochondrial-expressed intron-encoded maturase protein are required for splicing the fourth intron (bI4) of the yeast cob gene, which expresses an electron transfer protein that is essential to respiration. However, the role of the tRNA synthetase, as well as the function of the bI4 maturase, remain unclear. As a first step toward...

2008
Benjamin J. Kaspar Abby L. Bifano Mark G. Caprara

The Pet54p protein is an archetypical example of a dual functioning ('moonlighting') protein: it is required for translational activation of the COX3 mRNA and splicing of the aI5beta group I intron in the COX1 pre-mRNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria (mt). Genetic and biochemical analyses in yeast are consistent with Pet54p forming a complex with other translational activators that, in...

Journal: :Nucleic Acids Research 2013

Journal: :Frontiers in Plant Science 2023

Compared to nuclear genomes, mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomes) are small and usually code for only a few dozen genes. Still, identifying genes their structure can be challenging time-consuming. Even automated tools genome annotation often require manual analysis curation by skilled experts. The most difficult steps (i) the structural modelling of intron-containing genes; (ii) identification d...

Journal: :Nucleic acids research 1994
J Lykke-Andersen H P Thi-Ngoc R A Garrett

The protein encoded by intron 1 of the single 23S rRNA gene of the archaeal hyperthermophile Pyrobaculum organotrophum was isolated and shown to constitute a homing-type DNA endonuclease, I-PorI. It cleaves the intron- 23S rDNA of the closely related organism Pyrobaculum islandicum near the site of intron insertion in Pb.organotrophum. In contrast, no endonuclease activity was detected for the ...

2005
Laura Elizabeth Corina David L. Herrin Karen Browning John La Claire Alan Lloyd Edward Theriot Kristina Mahan

Acknowledgements I would like to thank the past and present members of the Herrin lab for an excellent graduate school experience. Special thanks go to Dr. O.W. Odom for his help and guidance with experimental design, troubleshooting, and data analysis. I am also indebted to Kristina Mahan and Weihua Quo for critical reading of this manuscript.

Journal: :The EMBO journal 2002
Seung Bae Rho Tommie L Lincecum Susan A Martinis

Yeast mitochondrial leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LeuRS) binds to the bI4 intron and collaborates with the bI4 maturase to aid excision of the group I intron. Deletion analysis isolated the inserted LeuRS CP1 domain as a critical factor in the protein's splicing activity. Protein fragments comprised of just the LeuRS CP1 region rescued complementation of a yeast strain that expressed a splicing-defec...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2011
Linda D Hicks Indu Warrier Rahul Raghavan Michael F Minnick

The 23S rRNA gene of Coxiella burnetii, the agent of Q fever in humans, contains an unusually high number of conserved, selfish genetic elements, including two group I introns, termed Cbu.L1917 (L1917) and Cbu.L1951 (L1951). To better understand the role that introns play in Coxiella's biology, we determined the intrinsic stability time periods (in vitro half-lives) of the encoded ribozymes to ...

Journal: :Nucleic acids research 1994
Takashi Yamada Koichiro Tamura Tadanori Aimi Puttaporn Songsri

We report the occurrence of self-splicing group I introns in viruses that infect the eukaryotic green alga Chlorella. The introns contained all the conserved features of primary sequence and secondary structure previously described for the group IB introns. The Chlorella viral introns (approximately 400 nt) self-spliced in vitro, yielding the typical group I intron splicing intermediates and pr...

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