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Giant group I intron in a mitochondrial genome is removed by RNA back-splicing.

Sylvia Ighem ChiMikael DahlÅse EmblemSteinar D Johansen
Published in: BMC molecular biology (2019)
ND5-717 was removed by group I intron splicing from a small primary transcript that contained a permutated intron-exon arrangement. The splicing pathway involved a circular exon-containing RNA intermediate, which is a hallmark of RNA back-splicing. ND5-717 represents the first reported natural group I intron that becomes excised by back-splicing from a permuted precursor RNA. Back-splicing may explain why Corallimorpharia mitochondrial genomes tolerate giant group I introns.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • nucleic acid
  • dna methylation
  • single cell
  • rna seq