Previous studies suggested that domains 5 and 6
(D5 and D6) of group II introns act together in splicing
and that the two helical structures probably do not interact
by helix stacking. Here, we characterized the major Mg2+
ion- and salt-dependent, long-wave UV light-induced, intramolecular
crosslinks formed in 4-thiouridine-containing D56 RNA from
intron 5γ (aI5γ) of the COXI gene of yeast mtDNA.
Four major crosslinks were mapped and found to result from
covalent bonds between nucleotides separating D5 from D6
[called J(56)] and residues of D6 near and including
the branch nucleotide. These findings are extended by results
of similar experiments using 4-thioU containing D56 RNAs
from a mutant allele of aI5γ and from the group IIA
intron, aI1. Trans-splicing experiments show that
the crosslinked wild-type aI5γ D56 RNAs are active
for both splicing reactions, including some first-step
branching. An RNA containing the 3-nt J(56) sequence and
D6 of aI5γ yields one main crosslink that is identical
to the most minor of the crosslinks obtained with D56 RNA,
but in this case in a cation-independent fashion. We conclude
that the interaction between J(56) and D6 is influenced
by charge repulsion between the D5 and D6 helix backbones
and that high concentrations of cations allow the helices
to approach closely under self-splicing conditions. The
interaction between J(56) and D6 appears to be a significant
factor establishing a side-by-side (i.e., not stacked)
orientation of the helices of the two domains.