4.4 Article

Unusual group II introns in bacteria of the Bacillus cereus group

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 187, Issue 15, Pages 5437-5451

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.187.15.5437-5451.2005

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A combination of sequence and structure analysis and reverse transcriptase PCR experiments was used to characterize the group 11 introns in the complete genomes of two strains of the pathogen Bacillus cereus. While B. cereus ATCC 14579 harbors a single intron element in the chromosome, B. cereus ATCC 10987 contains three introns in the chromosome and four in its 208-kb pBc10987 plasmid. The most striking finding is the presence in B. cereus ATCC 10987 of an intron [B.c.12(a)] located on the reverse strand of a gene encoding a putative cell surface protein which appears to be correlated to strains of clinical origin. Because of the opposite orientation of B.c.12(a), the gene is disrupted. Even more striking is that B.c.12(a) splices out of an RNA transcript corresponding to the opposite DNA strand. All other intragenic introns studied here are inserted in the same orientation as their host genes and splice out of the mRNA in vivo, setting the flanking exons in frame. Noticeably, B.c.I3 in B. cereus ATCC 10987 represents the first example of a group 11 intron entirely included within a conserved replication gene, namely, the et subunit of DNA polymerase III. Another striking finding is that the observed 3' splice site of B.c.I4 occurs 56 bp after the predicted end of the intron. This apparently unusual splicing mechanism may be related to structural irregularities in the 3' terminus. Finally, we also show that the intergenic introns of B. cereus ATCC 10987 are transcribed with their upstream genes and do splice in vivo.

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