Engineering a ribozyme cleavage-induced split fluorescent aptamer complementation assay

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Abstract

Hammerhead ribozymes are self-cleaving RNA molecules capable of regulating gene expression in living cells. Their cleavage performance is strongly influenced by intra-molecular loop-loop interactions, a feature not readily accessible through modern prediction algorithms. Ribozyme engineering and efficient implementation of ribozyme-based genetic switches requires detailed knowledge of individual self-cleavage performances. By rational design, we devised fluorescent aptamer-ribozyme RNA architectures that allow for the real-time measurement of ribozyme self-cleavage activity in vitro. The engineered nucleic acid molecules implement a split Spinach aptamer sequence that is made accessible for strand displacement upon ribozyme self-cleavage, thereby complementing the fluorescent Spinach aptamer. This fully RNA-based ribozyme performance assay correlates ribozyme cleavage activity with Spinach fluorescence to provide a rapid and straightforward technology for the validation of loop-loop interactions in hammerhead ribozymes.

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Ausländer, S., Fuchs, D., Hürlemann, S., Ausländer, D., & Fussenegger, M. (2016). Engineering a ribozyme cleavage-induced split fluorescent aptamer complementation assay. Nucleic Acids Research, 44(10). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw117

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