RNA splicing
During pre-messenger RNA (pre-mrRNA) processing, cis-splicing reactions remove non-coding introns and joins coding exons. The majority of splicing is catalyzed by spliceosomes, large RNA-protein complexes composed of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) that recognize splice donor and acceptor sites within the nascent RNA strand. Alternative mRNAs for a given gene can be created during the splicing reactions through varying the degree of cutting and splicing of introns and exons guided by alternative splice sites. C. elegans also exhibits trans-splicing where sequences from different primary RNA transcripts are used to make the mRNA. In C. elegans, ~70% of transcripts are trans-spliced with either a splice leader sequence SL1 or SL2 joined to the final transcript. Splice leaders are important