NaSSU1 is a complex nuclear group I intron found
in several species of Naegleria, consisting of
a large self-splicing group I ribozyme (NaGIR2), which
itself is interrupted by a small, group I-like ribozyme
(NaGIR1) and an open reading frame (ORF) coding for a homing
endonuclease. The GIR1 ribozyme cleaves in vitro transcripts
of NaSSU1 at two internal processing sites about 400 nt
downstream of the 5′ end of the intron, proximal
to the endonuclease ORF. Here we demonstrate that self-cleavage
of the excised intron also occurs in vivo in Naegleria
gruberi, generating an ORF-containing RNA that possesses
a short leader with a sequence element likely to be involved
in gene expression. To assess the functional significance
of self-cleavage, we constructed a genetic system in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae. First, a mutant yeast strain was selected
with a mutation in all the rRNA genes, rendering the rDNA
resistant to cleavage by the Naegleria endonuclease.
Active endonuclease, which is otherwise lethal, could be
expressed readily in these cells. Endonuclease activity
also could be detected in extracts of yeast harboring plasmids
in which the endonuclease ORF was embedded in its native
context in the intron. Analysis of the RNA from these yeast
cells showed that the excised intron RNA was processed
as in N. gruberi. A mutant intron constructed
to prevent self-cleavage of the RNA failed to express endonuclease
activity. These results support the hypothesis that the
NaGIR1-catalyzed self-cleavage of the intron RNA is a key
event in expression of the endonuclease.