What is RNA made up of?
Why is the 2 Hydroxyl Group important ?
How is genetic information in prokaryotes trasnferred from genes to proteins?
How does eukaryotic protein coding occur?
What are the coding and non coding parts of DNA called?
introns - non coding
exons- coding expressed
Why are eukaryotic genes split ?
Why must introns be removed?
-sequence of intron regions vary more than protein coding regions!
Why is splicing essential in Eukaryotes?
why is it not as simple to say ‘ one intron to one gene’?
However multiple introns may be spliced differently in different circumstances - e.g. in different tissues. ( proteins encoded do not have to identical)
therefore one gene can encode more than one protein!! - the proteins are not identical and may have distinct properties ( this is very important in complex organisms)
- multiple introns do NOT have to be removed in the same pattern.
- introns are recognised independently
( ribosomal processing occurs)
what is Recursive Splicing in Drosophila ?
What is snoRNA?
are stop Introns just junk ?
What are the two types of snoRNA ?
- H/ACA box snoRNA
What are the functions of snoRNA?
What is the role of intron sequences?
What is the Spliceosome ?
How are introns recognized?
What is similar between introns?
give an example of the splicing of a small subset of introns?
There re two types of spliceosomes?
What are snRNPS ?
How are introns recognised?
What experimental evidence is there for base pairing between snRNAs and Intron sequences?
What the two steps in which introns are removed?
getting from step one to step two require intermediates !!!!
splicing step 1:
- trans - esterification
this is when the 2 - hydroxyl group of the branch site A residue attacks the phosphodiester bond between exon 1 and the 5’ end of the intron.
( refer to page 7 of lecture 1 of RNA processing)
Splicing step 2:
- trans esterification
this is when the 3’ hydroxyl group ( which was liberated by the first step) of the terminal ribose of the free 5’ exon attacks the phosphodiester bond between the 3’ end of the intron and the adjacent exon
(refer to page 8 of lecture 2 notes on RNA processing)