In the pre-mRNA processing machinery of eukaryotic cells, U6
snRNA is located at or near the active site for pre-mRNA splicing
catalysis, and U6 is involved in catalyzing the first chemical
step of splicing. We have further defined the roles of key features
of yeast U6 snRNA in the splicing process. By assaying spliceosome
assembly and splicing in yeast extracts, we found that mutations
of yeast U6 nt 56 and 57 are similar to previously reported
deletions of U2 nt 27 or 28, all within yeast U2-U6 helix
Ia. These mutations lead to the accumulation of yeast
A1 spliceosomes, which form just prior to the Prp2 ATPase step
and the first chemical step of splicing. These results strongly
suggest that, at a late stage of spliceosome assembly, the presence
of U2-U6 helix Ia is important for promoting the
first chemical step of splicing, presumably by bringing together
the 5′ splice site region of pre-mRNA, which is base paired
to U6 snRNA, and the branchsite region of the intron, which
is base paired to U2 snRNA, for activation of the first chemical
step of splicing, as previously proposed by Madhani and Guthrie
[Cell, 1992, 71: 803–817].
In the 3′ intramolecular stem-loop of U6, mutation G81C
causes an allele-specific accumulation of U6 snRNP. Base pairing
of the U6 3′ stem-loop in yeast spliceosomes does not
extend as far as to include the U6 sequence of U2-U6 helix
Ib, in contrast to the human U6 3′ stem-loop
structure.