Ribozymes 2021
DOI: 10.1002/9783527814527.ch6
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Self‐Splicing GroupIIIntrons

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Splicing is a ubiquitous and essential biological reaction whereby protein-coding or regulatory RNAs (the exons) are excised from precursor transcripts by removing intronic sequences. In prokaryotes and eukaryotic organelles, splicing is performed by auto-catalytic introns, some of which regulate the expression of vital metabolic genes (Chillón I., 2021). Of these, the socalled group II introns constitute the ancestors of the eukaryotic spliceosome, a megadaltonlarge ribonucleoprotein complex that ensures the correct maturation of ~90% of human genes and whose aberrant activity causes ~15% of all human hereditary diseases and cancers (Jiang and Chen, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Splicing is a ubiquitous and essential biological reaction whereby protein-coding or regulatory RNAs (the exons) are excised from precursor transcripts by removing intronic sequences. In prokaryotes and eukaryotic organelles, splicing is performed by auto-catalytic introns, some of which regulate the expression of vital metabolic genes (Chillón I., 2021). Of these, the socalled group II introns constitute the ancestors of the eukaryotic spliceosome, a megadaltonlarge ribonucleoprotein complex that ensures the correct maturation of ~90% of human genes and whose aberrant activity causes ~15% of all human hereditary diseases and cancers (Jiang and Chen, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Besides catalyzing their self-splicing, group II introns also act as mobile retroelements, thus crucially contributing to genetic diversity throughout evolution (Martinez-Abarca and Toro, 2000). Importantly, as splicing ribozymes and retroelements, group II introns are potential targets of antifungal agents and molecular machines that can be engineered for site-specific insertion of cargo genes into genomic DNA (Chillón I., 2021). Therefore, their modulation with small RNA-targeting molecules has enormous potential to probe fundamental biological mechanisms, with direct translational applications in biotechnology and human medicine (Warner et al, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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