International audienceWe have identified an 11 nucleotide RNA motif, [CCUAAG...UAUGG], that is extraordinarily abundant in group I and group II self-splicing introns at sites known, or suspected from co-variation analysis, to interact with hairpin terminal loops with a GNRA consensus sequence. Base substitution experiments using a ribozyme-substrate system derived from a group I intron reveal that this motif interacts preferentially with GAAA terminal loops and binds them with remarkable affinity, compared with other known combinations of GNRA loops and matched targets. A copy of the [CCUAAG...UAUGG] motif which is present in domain I of many group II introns is shown to interact with the GAAA terminal loop that caps domain V. This is the f...
AbstractRecent functional analysis of catalytic and exon-binding domains from group II autocatalytic...
Group II self-splicing introns catalyze autoexcision from precursor RNA tran-scripts by a mechanism ...
<p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Searching genomes for ribozymes and riboswitches"...
AbstractBackground: Group I introns self-splice via two consecutive trans-esterification reactions i...
Terminal tetraloops consisting of GNRA sequences are often found in biologically active large RNAs. ...
can site [26]. However, patterns of sequence similarity Review TRENDS in Biochemical Sciences Vol.31...
Large RNAs often utilize GNRA tetraloops as structural elements to stabilize the overall tertiary fo...
Group I and group II introns are not only catalytic RNAs, but also mobile genetic elements. The succ...
ABSTRACT: Hairpin secondary structural elements play important roles in the folding and function of ...
AbstractBackground: Group II introns are self-splicing RNAs that have mechanistic similarity to the ...
SummaryNoncoding RNAs form unique 3D structures, which perform many regulatory functions. To underst...
The catalytic core of Group I self-splicing introns has been proposed to consist of two structural d...
Functional RNAs often form compact structures characterized by closely packed helices. Crystallograp...
Group II introns are a class of ribozymes capable of self-excision from a nascent pre-mRNA sequence ...
Group I and group II introns are both large, multi-domain RNAs that are capable of self-splicing. Li...
AbstractRecent functional analysis of catalytic and exon-binding domains from group II autocatalytic...
Group II self-splicing introns catalyze autoexcision from precursor RNA tran-scripts by a mechanism ...
<p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Searching genomes for ribozymes and riboswitches"...
AbstractBackground: Group I introns self-splice via two consecutive trans-esterification reactions i...
Terminal tetraloops consisting of GNRA sequences are often found in biologically active large RNAs. ...
can site [26]. However, patterns of sequence similarity Review TRENDS in Biochemical Sciences Vol.31...
Large RNAs often utilize GNRA tetraloops as structural elements to stabilize the overall tertiary fo...
Group I and group II introns are not only catalytic RNAs, but also mobile genetic elements. The succ...
ABSTRACT: Hairpin secondary structural elements play important roles in the folding and function of ...
AbstractBackground: Group II introns are self-splicing RNAs that have mechanistic similarity to the ...
SummaryNoncoding RNAs form unique 3D structures, which perform many regulatory functions. To underst...
The catalytic core of Group I self-splicing introns has been proposed to consist of two structural d...
Functional RNAs often form compact structures characterized by closely packed helices. Crystallograp...
Group II introns are a class of ribozymes capable of self-excision from a nascent pre-mRNA sequence ...
Group I and group II introns are both large, multi-domain RNAs that are capable of self-splicing. Li...
AbstractRecent functional analysis of catalytic and exon-binding domains from group II autocatalytic...
Group II self-splicing introns catalyze autoexcision from precursor RNA tran-scripts by a mechanism ...
<p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Searching genomes for ribozymes and riboswitches"...