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Roles of minor spliceosome in intron recognition and the convergence with the better understood major spliceosome

Journal

WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-RNA
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/wrna.1761

Keywords

major spliceosome; minor intron; minor spliceosome; splicing; snRNA

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RNA splicing is a process catalyzed by spliceosomes in the nucleus, which removes intronic sequences from precursor RNAs and generates mature RNA. This process increases proteome complexity and fine-tunes gene expression. The major spliceosome and the minor spliceosome are the two coexisting spliceosomes in most metazoans. The major spliceosome removes the majority of introns, while the minor spliceosome removes fewer introns. Understanding the dynamic assembly, catalysis, and protein composition of the minor spliceosome is still limited. The recognition and processing of minor introns, which are rare and usually flanked by major introns, are also poorly understood.
Catalyzed by spliceosomes in the nucleus, RNA splicing removes intronic sequences from precursor RNAs in eukaryotes to generate mature RNA, which also significantly increases proteome complexity and fine-tunes gene expression. Most metazoans have two coexisting spliceosomes; the major spliceosome, which removes >99.5% of introns, and the minor spliceosome, which removes far fewer introns (only 770 at present have been predicted in the human genome). Both spliceosomes are large and dynamic machineries, each consisting of five small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs) and more than 100 proteins. However, the dynamic assembly, catalysis, and protein composition of the minor spliceosome are still poorly understood. With different splicing signals, minor introns are rare and usually distributed alone and flanked by major introns in genes, raising questions of how they are recognized by the minor spliceosome and how their processing deals with the splicing of neighboring major introns. Due to large numbers of introns and close similarities between the two machinery, cooperative, and competitive recognition by the two spliceosomes has been investigated. Functionally, many minor-intron-containing genes are evolutionarily conserved and essential. Mutations in the minor spliceosome exhibit a variety of developmental defects in plants and animals and are linked to numerous human diseases. Here, we review recent progress in the understanding of minor splicing, compare currently known components of the two spliceosomes, survey minor introns in a wide range of organisms, discuss cooperation and competition of the two spliceosomes in splicing of minor-intron-containing genes, and contributions of minor splicing mutations in development and diseases. This article is categorized under: RNA Processing > Processing of Small RNAs RNA Processing > Splicing Mechanisms RNA Structure and Dynamics > RNA Structure, Dynamics and Chemistry

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