BZIP intron saccharomycetales

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Consensus secondary structure and sequence conservation of bZIP intron in Saccharomycetales

The bZIP intron saccharomycetales is an unconventional bZIP intron located in the HAC1 mRNA in most budding yeast belonging to Saccharomycetales order. The structure consists of two hairpins with their loop regions defining 5’ and 3’ splice sites and a long, poorly conserved sequence separating them.[1] In some species this poorly conserved region can pair with the 5’ UTR of the HAC1 mRNA forming a pseudoknot, which stalls the translation.[2] The unconventional splicing is performed by an endoribonuclease Ire1 in response to ER stress and it was first shown in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hooks KB, Griffiths-Jones S (2011). "Conserved RNA structures in the non-canonical Hac1/Xbp1 intron". RNA Biol. 8 (4): 552–556. doi:10.4161/rna.8.4.15396. PMC 3225973. PMID 21593604.
  2. ^ Ruegsegger U, Leber JH, Walter P (2001). "Block of HAC1 mRNA translation by long-range base pairing is released by cytoplasmic splicing upon induction of the unfolded protein response". Cell. 107 (1): 103–114. doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(01)00505-0. PMID 11595189.
  3. ^ Sidrauski C, Walter P (1997). "The transmembrane kinase Ire1p is a site-specific endonuclease that initiates mRNA splicing in the unfolded protein response". Cell. 90 (6): 1031–1039. doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(00)80369-4. PMID 9323131.