Scientists at Yale University have described in the greatest detail yet aspects of the chemical processes by which RNA carries out the expression of our genes.
In a paper published Oct. 26 in the journal Cell, researchers report 14 crystal structures for a group II intron — an enzyme involved in RNA splicing, a critical phase of genetic reproduction. These new views capture the enzyme’s working parts and multiple steps in its operation, revealing the chemical mechanisms at work.
“We didn’t just get a snapshot — we caught the intron in action,” said principal investigator Anna Pyle, the William Edward Gilbert Professor of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology and professor of chemistry at Yale.
A major function of RNA is copying all genetic information and making it readable by the cellular protein factories, the ribosomes. But RNA needs to be edited, and an early step in the editing process is splicing.
Splicing consists of breaking apart the RNA and recombining its pieces in ways that produce just the right protein the organism requires at any given time. In many organisms this vital cut-and-paste action is sometimes self-catalyzed by intrinsic RNA components called group II introns. In more complex organisms, including humans, the process is performed by a similar yet more sophisticated machinery, the spliceosome, which has evolved from and works like the group II introns.
“Splicing is a very basic phase of gene expression,” said Pyle, who is also an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. “Whenever splicing gets messed up, you’ll find a disease that results. Until now we haven’t really understood the splicing reaction chemically.”
The paper, which builds on previous work in Pyle’s lab, looks at the process of splicing at the atomic level and further establishes RNA’s chemical and structural complexity, showing it is capable of recruiting diverse metals, such as magnesium and potassium, and orienting them to work with RNA. The research particularly highlights the role and diversity of metal ions in the process.
“We are making a map of the landscape that catalyzes splicing reactions,” said Marco Marcia, a postdoctoral researcher in Pyle’s lab and the paper’s lead author. “We see dynamic states before and after reaction.”
The researchers said RNA may perform more functions than previously thought. “RNA is revealing its ability to utilize metals in the environment to do its chemical transformations,” Pyle said. “RNA can do complex chemistry, just like a protein can.”
The article is titled “Visualizing group II intron catalysis through the stages of splicing.”
The National Institutes of Health and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute provided support for the research.