Invertases are responsible for the breakdown of
sucrose to fructose and glucose. In all but one plant invertase
gene, the second exon is only 9 nt in length and encodes
three amino acids of a five-amino-acid sequence that is
highly conserved in all invertases of plant origin. Sequences
responsible for normal splicing (inclusion) of exon 2 have
been investigated in vivo using the potato invertase, invGF
gene. The upstream intron 1 is required for inclusion whereas
the downstream intron 2 is not. Mutations within intron
1 have identified two sequence elements that are needed
for inclusion: a putative branchpoint sequence and an adjacent
U-rich region. Both are recognized plant intron splicing
signals. The branchpoint sequence lies further upstream
from the 3′ splice site of intron 1 than is normally
seen in plant introns. All dicotyledonous plant invertase
genes contain this arrangement of sequence elements: a
distal branchpoint sequence and adjacent, downstream U-rich
region. Intron 1 sequences upstream of the branchpoint
and sequences in exons 1, 2, or 3 do not determine inclusion,
suggesting that intron or exon splicing enhancer elements
seen in vertebrate mini-exon systems are absent. In addition,
mutation of the 3′ and 5′ splice sites flanking
the mini-exon cause skipping of the mini-exon, suggesting
that both splice sites are required. The branchpoint/U-rich
sequence is able to promote splicing of mini-exons of 6,
3, and 1 nt in length and of a chicken cTNT mini-exon of
6 nt. These sequence elements therefore act as a splicing
enhancer and appear to function via interactions between
factors bound at the branchpoint/U-rich region and at the
5′ splice site of intron 2, activating removal of
this intron followed by removal of intron 1. This first
example of splicing of a plant mini-exon to be analyzed
demonstrates that particular arrangement of standard plant
intron splicing signals can drive constitutive splicing
of a mini-exon.