logo
AAT Bioquest

When does self-splicing occur?

Posted March 14, 2024


Answer

Self-splicing refers to the process in which a segment of RNA removes itself from a larger RNA molecule without the assistance of proteins or enzymes. Self-splicing happens when introns (acting as ribozymes) catalyze their own removal from the mature RNA molecule. The RNA molecule folds into a specific three-dimensional structure, allowing it to catalyze its own removal from the primary RNA transcript. 

Additional resources

Molecule of the Month: Self-splicing RNA

DNA and RNA Quantitation

StrandBrite™ Green RNA Quantifying Reagent *200X DMSO Solution*