Domain 6 (D6) of group II introns contains a bulged
adenosine that serves as the branch-site during self-splicing.
In addition to this adenosine, other structural features
in D6 are likely to contribute to the efficiency of branching.
To understand their role in promoting self-splicing, the
branch-site and surrounding nucleotides were mutagenized.
Detailed kinetic analysis on the self-splicing efficiency
of the mutants revealed several interesting features. First,
elimination of the branch-site does not preclude efficient
splicing, which takes place instead through a hydrolytic
first step. Second, pairing of the branch-site does not
eliminate branching, particularly if the adenosine is involved
in a mispair. Third, the G-U pairs that often surround
group II intron branch-points contribute to the efficiency
of branching. These results suggest that there is a strong
driving force for promoting self-splicing by group II introns,
which employ a versatile set of different mechanisms for
ensuring that splicing is successful. In addition, the
behavior of these mutants indicates that a bulged adenosine
per se is not the important determinant for branch-site
recognition in group II introns. Rather, the data suggest
that the branch-site adenosine is recognized as a flipped
base, a conformation that can be promoted by a variety
of different substructures in RNA and DNA.