Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5510809 | Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2017 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The spliceosome is an intricate molecular machine which catalyses the removal of introns from eukaryotic mRNA precursors by two trans-esterification reactions (branching and exon ligation) to produce mature mRNA with uninterrupted protein coding sequences. The structures of the spliceosome in several key states determined by electron cryo-microscopy have greatly advanced our understanding of its molecular mechanism. The catalytic RNA core is formed during the activation of the fully assembled B to Bact complex and remains largely unchanged throughout the splicing cycle. RNA helicases and step specific factors regulate docking and undocking of the substrates (branch site and 3â² splice site) to the single RNA-based active site to catalyse the two trans-esterification reactions.
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Authors
Sjors HW Scheres, Kiyoshi Nagai,