The bZIP intron basidiomycota is an unconventional bZIP intron found mainly in the Basidiomycota and some Mucoromycotina fungi. The consensus RNA structure is formed by three hairpins - two well conserved at the 5’ and 3’ ends and a variable one in between them.[1] The loop regions of 5’ and 3’ hairpins define the splice sites recognised by Ire1, which performs the unconventional splicing in response to ER stress. In Basidiomycota, splicing results in excised introns from 20 to 101 nt in length and it was first described in Cryptococcus neoformans.[2]
References
edit- ^ Hooks KB, Griffiths-Jones S (2011). "Conserved RNA structures in the non-canonical Hac1/Xbp1 intron". RNA Biol. 8 (4): 552–556. doi:10.4161/rna.8.4.15396. PMC 3225973. PMID 21593604.
- ^ Cheon, Seon Ah; Jung, Kwang-Woo; Chen, Ying-Lien; Heitman, Joseph; Bahn, Yong-Sun; Kang, Hyun Ah (2011). Doering, Tamara L. (ed.). "Unique Evolution of the UPR Pathway with a Novel bZIP Transcription Factor, Hxl1, for Controlling Pathogenicity of Cryptococcus neoformans". PLOS Pathogens. 7 (8): e1002177. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1002177. ISSN 1553-7374. PMC 3154848. PMID 21852949.