Mutants in the Drosophila crooked neck
(crn) gene show an embryonic lethal phenotype
with severe developmental defects. The unusual crn protein
consists of sixteen tandem repeats of the 34 amino acid
tetratricopeptide (TPR) protein recognition domain. Crn-like
TPR elements are found in several RNA processing proteins,
although it is unknown how the TPR repeats or the crn protein
contribute to Drosophila development. We have
isolated a Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene, CLF1,
that encodes a crooked neck-like factor.
CLF1 is an essential gene but the lethal phenotype
of a clf1::HIS3 chromosomal null mutant can be
rescued by plasmid-based expression of CLF1 or the Drosophila
crn open reading frame. Clf1p is required in vivo and
in vitro for pre-mRNA 5′ splice site cleavage. Extracts
depleted of Clf1p arrest spliceosome assembly after U2
snRNP addition but prior to productive U4/U6.U5 association.
Yeast two-hybrid analyses and in vitro binding studies
show that Clf1p interacts specifically and differentially
with the U1 snRNP-Prp40p protein and the yeast U2AF65 homolog,
Mud2p. Intriguingly, Prp40p and Mud2p also bind the phylogenetically
conserved branchpoint binding protein (BBP/SF1). Our results
indicate that Clf1p acts as a scaffolding protein in spliceosome
assembly and suggest that Clf1p may support the cross-intron
bridge during the prespliceosome-to-spliceosome transition.