Substrate selection rules for the hairpin ribozyme determined by in vitro selection, mutation, and analysis of mismatched substrates.
Open Access
- 1 January 1993
- journal article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genes & Development
- Vol. 7 (1) , 130-138
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.7.1.130
Abstract
Substrate recognition by the hairpin ribozyme has been proposed to involve two short intermolecular helices, termed helix 1 and helix 2. We have used a combination of three methods (cleavage of mismatched substrates, in vitro selection, and site-specific mutational analysis) to systematically determine the substrate recognition rules for this RNA enzyme. Assays measuring substrate cleavage in trans under multiple turnover conditions were conducted using the wild-type ribozyme and substrates containing mismatches in all sites potentially recognized by the ribozyme. Molecules containing single- and multiple-base mismatches in helix 2 at sites distant from the cleavage site (g-4c, u-5a, g-4c: u-5a) were cleaved with reduced efficiency, whereas those with mismatches proximal to the cleavage site (c-2a, a-3c, c-2a: a-3c) were not cut. Analogous results were obtained for helix 1, where mismatches distal from the cleavage site (u+7a, u+8a, u+9a, u+7a: u+8a: u+9a) were used much more efficiently than those proximal to the cleavage site (c+4a, u-5a, g+6c, c+4a: u+5a: g+6c). In vitro selection experiments were carried out to identify active variants from populations of molecules in which either helix 1 or helix 2 was randomized. Results constitute an artificial phylogenetic data base that proves base-pairing of nucleotides at five positions within helix 1 and three positions within helix 2 and reveals a significant sequence bias at 3 bp (c+4.G6, c-2.G11, and a-3.U12). This sequence bias was confirmed at two sites by measuring relative cleavage rates of all 16 possible dinucleotide combinations at base pairs c+4.G6 and c-2.G11.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- RNA substrate binding site in the catalytic core of the Tetrahymena ribozymeNature, 1992
- Preformed ribozyme destroys tumour necrosis factor mRNA in human cellsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1992
- Group I Intron Self-Splicing with Adenosine: Evidence for a Single Nucleoside-Binding SiteScience, 1991
- Modelling of the three-dimensional architecture of group I catalytic introns based on comparative sequence analysisJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- Catalysis of RNA cleavage by the Tetrahymena thermophila ribozyme. 2. Kinetic description of the reaction of an RNA substrate that forms a mismatch at the active siteBiochemistry, 1990
- Nucleotide sequence and structural analysis of two satellite RNAs associated with chicory yellow mottle virusJournal of General Virology, 1990
- Selection in vitro of an RNA enzyme that specifically cleaves single-stranded DNANature, 1990
- The guanosine binding site of the Tetrahymena ribozymeNature, 1989
- One binding site determines sequence specificity of Tetrahymena pre-rRNA self-splicing, trans-splicing, and RNA enzyme activityCell, 1986
- Splice-site selection by a self-splicing RNA of TetrahymenaNature, 1986