In all domains of life, Archaea, Eukarya and Bacteria, the unusual amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) is co-translationally incorporated into proteins by recoding a UGA stop codon to a sense codon. A secondary structure on the mRNA, the selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS), is required, but its position, secondary structure and binding partner(s) are not conserved across the tree of life. Thus far, the nature of archaeal SECIS elements has been derived mainly from sequence analyses. A recently developed