Splicing of U12-dependent introns requires the
function of U11, U12, U6atac, U4atac, and U5 snRNAs. Recent
studies have suggested that U6atac and U12 snRNAs interact
extensively with each other, as well as with the pre-mRNA
by Watson–Crick base pairing. The overall structure
and many of the sequences are very similar to the highly
conserved analogous regions of U6 and U2 snRNAs. We have
identified the homologs of U6atac and U12 snRNAs in the
plant Arabidopsis thaliana. These snRNAs are significantly
diverged from human, showing overall identities of 65%
for U6atac and 55% for U12 snRNA. However, there is almost
complete conservation of the sequences and structures that
are implicated in splicing. The sequence of plant U6atac
snRNA shows complete conservation of the nucleotides that
base pair to the 5′ splice site sequences of U12-dependent
introns in human. The immediately adjacent AGAGA sequence,
which is found in human U6atac and all U6 snRNAs, is also
conserved. High conservation is also observed in the sequences
of U6atac and U12 that are believed to base pair with each
other. The intramolecular U6atac stem-loop structure immediately
adjacent to the U12 interaction region differs from the
human sequence in 9 out of 21 positions. Most of these
differences are in base pairing regions with compensatory
changes occurring across the stem. To show that this stem-loop
was functional, it was transplanted into a human suppressor
U6atac snRNA expression construct. This chimeric snRNA
was inactive in vivo but could be rescued by coexpression
of a U4atac snRNA expression construct containing compensatory
mutations that restored base pairing to the chimeric U6atac
snRNA. These data show that base pairing of U4atac snRNA
to U6atac snRNA has a required role in vivo and that the
plant U6atac intramolecular stem-loop is the functional
analog of the human sequence.