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An overview of RNA splicing and functioning of splicing factors in land plant chloroplasts

Journal

RNA BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 897-907

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2022.2096801

Keywords

Chloroplast; intron; RNA splicing; RNP; splicing factor

Funding

  1. Shandong Province Key Research and Development Program [2019GSF107079]
  2. Science and Technology Demonstration Project of Bohai Granary of Shandong Province [2019BHLC002]
  3. Development Plan for Youth Innovation Team of Shandong Provincial [2019KJE012]
  4. Science and Technology Demonstration Project of Bohai Granary of Shandong Provincethe Science and Technology Demonstration Project of Bohai Granary of Shandong Province [2019BHLC002]

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RNA splicing is a process of removing introns and joining exons together in pre-mRNA. Chloroplast introns have lost their self-splicing ability and now rely on nuclear-encoded splicing factors. These splicing factors may form ribonucleoprotein particles to facilitate intron splicing. Although some chloroplast intron splicing factors have been identified, their precise roles in the splicing process remain unclear.
RNA splicing refers to a process by which introns of a pre-mRNA are excised and the exons at both ends are joined together. Chloroplast introns are inherently self-splicing ribozymes, but over time, they have lost self-splicing ability due to the degeneration of intronic elements. Thus, the splicing of chloroplast introns relies heavily on nuclear-encoded splicing factors, which belong to diverse protein families. Different splicing factors and their shared intron targets are supposed to form ribonucleoprotein particles (RNPs) to facilitate intron splicing. As characterized in a previous review, around 14 chloroplast intron splicing factors were identified until 2010. However, only a few genetic and biochemical evidence has shown that these splicing factors are required for the splicing of one or several introns. The roles of splicing factors are generally believed to facilitate intron folding; however, the precise role of each protein in RNA splicing remains ambiguous. This may be because the precise binding site of most of these splicing factors remains unexplored. In the last decade, several new splicing factors have been identified. Also, several splicing factors were found to bind to specific sequences within introns, which enhanced the understanding of splicing factors. Here, we summarize recent progress on the splicing factors in land plant chloroplasts and discuss their possible roles in chloroplast RNA splicing based on previous studies.

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