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Group II introns are a large class of self-catalytic ribozymes and mobile genetic elements found within the genes of all three domains of life. Ribozyme activity (e.g., self-splicing) can occur under high-salt conditions in vitro. However, assistance from proteins is required for in vivo splicing. In contrast to group I introns, intron excision occurs in the absence of GTP and involves the formation of a lariat, with an A-residue branchpoint strongly resembling that found in lariats formed during splicing of nuclear pre-mRNA. It is hypothesized that pre-mRNA splicing (see spliceosome) may have evolved from group II introns, due to the similar catalytic mechanism as well as the structural similarity of the Group II Domain V substructure to the U6/U2 extended snRNA. Finally, their ability to

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  • Group II introns are a large class of self-catalytic ribozymes and mobile genetic elements found within the genes of all three domains of life. Ribozyme activity (e.g., self-splicing) can occur under high-salt conditions in vitro. However, assistance from proteins is required for in vivo splicing. In contrast to group I introns, intron excision occurs in the absence of GTP and involves the formation of a lariat, with an A-residue branchpoint strongly resembling that found in lariats formed during splicing of nuclear pre-mRNA. It is hypothesized that pre-mRNA splicing (see spliceosome) may have evolved from group II introns, due to the similar catalytic mechanism as well as the structural similarity of the Group II Domain V substructure to the U6/U2 extended snRNA. Finally, their ability to site-specifically insert into DNA sites has been exploited as a tool for biotechnology. For example, group II introns can be modified to make site-specific genome insertions and deliver cargo DNA such as reporter genes or lox sites (en)
dbo:symbol
  • Domain_X
  • GIIM
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dbo:wikiPageID
  • 7916185 (xsd:integer)
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  • 14774 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1112937161 (xsd:integer)
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dbp:caption
  • full secondary structure of group II intron (en)
dbp:extra
  • 180.0
  • 300.0
dbp:interpro
  • IPR013597 (en)
  • IPR024937 (en)
dbp:name
  • Domain X (en)
  • Group II catalytic intron, D1-D4 (en)
  • Group II catalytic intron, D5 (en)
  • Group II intron, maturase-specific (en)
dbp:pdb
  • 4 (xsd:integer)
  • 6 (xsd:integer)
dbp:pfam
  • PF01348 (en)
  • PF08388 (en)
dbp:pfamClan
  • CL0359 (en)
dbp:rfam
  • RF00029 (en)
dbp:rfamClan
  • CL00102 (en)
dbp:symbol
  • Domain_X (en)
  • GIIM (en)
  • Intron_gpII (en)
  • group-II-D1D4 (en)
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  • Group II introns are a large class of self-catalytic ribozymes and mobile genetic elements found within the genes of all three domains of life. Ribozyme activity (e.g., self-splicing) can occur under high-salt conditions in vitro. However, assistance from proteins is required for in vivo splicing. In contrast to group I introns, intron excision occurs in the absence of GTP and involves the formation of a lariat, with an A-residue branchpoint strongly resembling that found in lariats formed during splicing of nuclear pre-mRNA. It is hypothesized that pre-mRNA splicing (see spliceosome) may have evolved from group II introns, due to the similar catalytic mechanism as well as the structural similarity of the Group II Domain V substructure to the U6/U2 extended snRNA. Finally, their ability to (en)
rdfs:label
  • Group II intron (en)
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