RNA-processing Nucleases
Abstract
Since every gene transcript contains RNA, the main distinguishing feature among transcripts is nucleotide sequence. It is probably sequence, therefore, that determines which biosynthetic pathway an RNA molecule enters—that for rRNA, mRNA, tRNA, or some other RNA species. It must also be sequence that ultimately determines which set of processing RNases acts on a particular gene transcript, although it may not be sequence alone that directly defines a cleavage site.
RNA-PROCESSING EVENTS
The involvement of RNases in RNA-processing events can be categorized as follows: (1) specific endonucleolytic cleavage of gene transcripts to alter their size; (2) specific exonucleolytic cleavage to perform small size reductions at either end of a molecule; or (3) specific rejoining of RNA molecules (ligation) associated with splicing of transcripts. The first two nucleolytic mechanisms are known...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.243-274