Comprehensive proteomic analysis of the human spliceosome

Z Zhou, LJ Licklider, SP Gygi, R Reed - Nature, 2002 - nature.com
Z Zhou, LJ Licklider, SP Gygi, R Reed
Nature, 2002nature.com
The precise excision of introns from pre-messenger RNA is performed by the spliceosome, a
macromolecular machine containing five small nuclear RNAs and numerous proteins. Much
has been learned about the protein components of the spliceosome from analysis of
individual purified small nuclear ribonucleoproteins and salt-stable spliceosome
'core'particles,. However, the complete set of proteins that constitutes intact functional
spliceosomes has yet to be identified. Here we use maltose-binding protein affinity …
Abstract
The precise excision of introns from pre-messenger RNA is performed by the spliceosome, a macromolecular machine containing five small nuclear RNAs and numerous proteins. Much has been learned about the protein components of the spliceosome from analysis of individual purified small nuclear ribonucleoproteins and salt-stable spliceosome ‘core’ particles,. However, the complete set of proteins that constitutes intact functional spliceosomes has yet to be identified. Here we use maltose-binding protein affinity chromatography, to isolate spliceosomes in highly purified and functional form. Using nanoscale microcapillary liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, we identify ∼145 distinct spliceosomal proteins, making the spliceosome the most complex cellular machine so far characterized. Our spliceosomes comprise all previously known splicing factors and 58 newly identified components. The spliceosome contains at least 30 proteins with known or putative roles in gene expression steps other than splicing. This complexity may be required not only for splicing multi-intronic metazoan pre-messenger RNAs, but also for mediating the extensive coupling between splicing and other steps in gene expression.
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