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Spliced leader RNA trans-splicing in dinoflagellates.

Zhang H, Hou Y, Miranda L, Campbell DA, Sturm NR, Gaasterland T, Lin S.

Department of Marine Sciences, University of Connecticut, 1080 Shennecossett Road, Groton, CT 06340, USA.

Through the analysis of hundreds of full-length cDNAs from fifteen species representing all major orders of dinoflagellates, we demonstrate that nuclear-encoded mRNAs in all species, from ancestral to derived lineages, are trans-spliced with the addition of the 22-nt conserved spliced leader (SL), DCCGUAGCCAUUUUGGCUCAAG (D = U, A, or G), to the 5' end. SL trans-splicing has been documented in a limited but diverse number of eukaryotes, in which this process makes it possible to translate polycistronically transcribed nuclear genes. In SL trans-splicing, SL-donor transcripts (SL RNAs) contain two functional domains: an exon that provides the SL for mRNA and an intron that contains a spliceosomal (Sm) binding site. In dinoflagellates, SL RNAs are unusually short at 50-60 nt, with a conserved Sm binding motif (AUUUUGG) located in the SL (exon) rather than the intron. The initiation nucleotide is predominantly U or A, an unusual feature that may affect capping, and hence the translation and stability of the recipient mRNA. The core SL element was found in mRNAs coding for a diverse array of proteins. Among the transcripts characterized were three homologs of Sm-complex subunits, indicating that the role of the Sm binding site is conserved, even if the location on the SL is not. Because association with an Sm-complex often signals nuclear import for U-rich small nuclear RNAs, it is unclear how this Sm binding site remains on mature mRNAs without impeding cytosolic localization or translation of the latter. The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. AF 512889, DQ 864761-DQ 864971, DQ 867053-DQ 867070, DQ 884413-DQ 884451, EF 133854-EF 133905, EF 133961-EF 134003, EF 134083-EF 134402, EF 141835, and EF 143070-EF 143105).

Publication Types:
PMID: 17360573 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

PMCID: PMC1838650