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Mol. Cell. Biol., Jan 1996, 422-429, Vol 16, No. 1
AM Rushforth and P Anderson
The transposable element Tc1 is responsible for most spontaneous mutations
that occur in many Caenorhabditis elegans strains. We analyzed the
abundance and sequence of mRNAs expressed from five different Tc1
insertions within either hlh-1 (a MyoD homolog) or unc-54 (a myosin heavy
chain gene). Each of the mutants expresses substantial quantities of mature
mRNA in which most or all of Tc1 has been removed by splicing. Such mRNAs
contain small insertions of Tc1 sequences and/or deletions of target gene
sequences at the resulting spliced junctions. Most of these mutant mRNAs do
not contain premature stop codons, and many are translated in frame to
produce proteins that are functional in vivo. The number and variety of
splice sites used to remove Tc1 from these mutant pre-mRNAs are remarkable.
Two-thirds of the Tc1-containing introns removed from hlh-1 and unc-54 lack
either the 5'-GU or AG-3' dinucleotides typically found at the termini of
eukaryotic introns. We conclude that splicing to remove Tc1 from mutant
pre-mRNAs allows many Tc1 insertions to be phenotypically silent. Such mRNA
processing may help Tc1 escape negative selection.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Splicing removes the Caenorhabditis elegans transposon Tc1 from most mutant pre-mRNAs
Department of Genetics, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.
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