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In group II self-splicing, what group is present in the intron sequence?

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Final answer:

In Group II self-splicing, an adenylate residue within the intron is key for forming a lariat structure and enabling the self-splicing mechanism without the need for external factors like snRNPs.

Step-by-step explanation:

In Group II self-splicing, the intron sequence contains an adenylate residue that is crucial for the splicing process. Unlike spliceosomal introns, Group II introns do not need small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) for their removal. Instead, these introns can form a lariat structure during splicing, using the 2'-hydroxyl group of an internal adenylate to attack the 3' end of the exon, which creates a 2',5'-phosphodiester bond. This self-splicing mechanism is distinctive for Group II introns found in chloroplast and mitochondrial rRNA, mRNA, tRNA, and some bacterial mRNAs, enabling them to excise themselves and re-ligate the exons.

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