Recognizing the 35th anniversary of the proposal that snRNPs are involved in splicing.

TitleRecognizing the 35th anniversary of the proposal that snRNPs are involved in splicing.
Publication TypeJournal Articles
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsMount SM, Wolin SL
JournalMol Biol Cell
Volume26
Issue20
Pagination3557-60
Date Published2015 Oct 15
ISSN1939-4586
Abstract

Thirty-five years ago, as young graduate students, we had the pleasure and privilege of being in Joan Steitz's laboratory at a pivotal point in the history of RNA molecular biology. Introns had recently been discovered in the laboratories of Philip Sharp and Richard Roberts, but the machinery for removing them from mRNA precursors was entirely unknown. This Retrospective describes our hypothesis that recently discovered snRNPs functioned in pre-mRNA splicing. The proposal was proven correct, as has Joan's intuition that small RNAs provide specificity to RNA processing reactions through base pairing in diverse settings. However, research over the intervening years has revealed that both splice site selection and splicing itself are much more complex and dynamic than we imagined.

DOI10.1091/mbc.E14-10-1486
Alternate JournalMol. Biol. Cell
PubMed ID26463979
PubMed Central IDPMC4603926
Grant ListR01GM073863 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States