Mechanistic analyses of nuclear pre-mRNA splicing
by the spliceosome and group II intron self-splicing provide
insight into both the catalytic strategies of splicing
and the evolutionary relationships between the different
splicing systems. We previously showed that 3′-sulfur
substitution at the 3′ splice site of a nuclear pre-mRNA
has no effect on splicing. We now report that 3′-sulfur
substitution at the 3′ splice site of a nuclear pre-mRNA
causes a switch in metal specificity when the second step
of splicing is monitored using a bimolecular exon-ligation
assay. This suggests that the spliceosome uses a catalytic
metal ion to stabilize the 3′-oxyanion leaving group
during the second step of splicing, as shown previously
for the first step. The lack of a metal-specificity switch
under cis splicing conditions indicates that a
rate-limiting conformational change between the two steps
of splicing may mask the subsequent chemical step and the
metal-specificity switch. As the group II intron, a true
ribozyme, uses identical catalytic strategies for splicing,
our results strengthen the argument that the spliceosome
is an RNA catalyst that shares a common molecular ancestor
with group II introns.