The polypyrimidine (py) tract of introns is required for efficient spliceosome
assembly and splicing of pre-mRNAs. A detailed mutational analysis of the
py tract of an adenovirus 2 intron was carried out. Utilizing a "precursor
in pieces" vector system, it was possible to synthesize py tract mutant
pre-mRNAs that were otherwise identical. The mutant pre-mRNAs that were
otherwise identical. The mutant pre-mRNAs were analyzed for in vitro splicing,
for formation of splicing complexes, and for binding to proteins in the
HeLa nuclear extract. Chimeric pre-mRNAs that contained the yeast branch
point consensus sequence (UAC-UAAC) and altered py tracts were also analyzed.
Mutational analysis showed the following. First, any mutation in the py
tract that affected splicing did so by interferring with complex A formation
in spliceosome assembly. Second, introduction of purines into the py tract
is detrimental only if the length of the tract is shortened and if there
is a reduction in the number of consecutive uracil residues. Third, uracil
and cytosine do not have equivalent functions in the py tract. Our results
with chimeric pre-mRNAs also show that a strong py tract can partially
replace a weak branch point sequence and a strong branch point sequence
can partially replace a weak py tract. Finally, the one surprising finding
obtained when examining protein binding was that a mutant pre-mRNA did
not bind to heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein C proteins and yet
spliced close to wild type level.