The branchpoint sequence and associated polypyrimidine tract
are firmly established splicing signals in vertebrates. In plants,
however, these signals have not been characterized in detail.
The potato invertase mini-exon 2 (9 nt) requires a branchpoint
sequence positioned around 50 nt upstream of the 5′ splice
site of the neighboring intron and a U11 element
found adjacent to the branchpoint in the upstream intron (Simpson
et al., RNA, 2000, 6:422–433). Utilizing
the sensitivity of this plant splicing system, these elements
have been characterized by systematic mutation and analysis
of the effect on inclusion of the mini-exon. Mutation of the
branchpoint sequence in all possible positions demonstrated
that branchpoints matching the consensus, CURAY, were most
efficient at supporting splicing. Branchpoint sequences that
differed from this consensus were still able to permit mini-exon
inclusion but at greatly reduced levels. Mutation of the downstream
U11 element suggested that it functioned as a
polypyrimidine tract rather than a UA-rich element, common to
plant introns. The minimum sequence requirement of the
polypyrimidine tract for efficient splicing was two closely
positioned groups of uridines 3–4 nt long (<6 nt apart)
that, within the context of the mini-exon system, required being
close (<14 nt) to the branchpoint sequence. The functional
characterization of the branchpoint sequence and polypyrimidine
tract defines these sequences in plants for the first time,
and firmly establishes polypyrimidine tracts as important signals
in splicing of at least some plant introns.