Abstract
In order to understand the catalysis mechanism of the hairpin ribozyme, mutant ribozymes were constructed. The distance between the loop A domain and the loop B domain was extended by inserting various lengths of nucleotide linkers at the hinge region in cis mutants, or the domains were separated physically in a trans mutant. All the mutant ribozymes, including the trans mutant, could cleave substrate RNA at the predicted site. A cis mutant with a single nucleotide insertion exhibited cleavage activity about twice as high as that of the wild-type (wt) ribozyme. The insertion of 2-5 nucleotides (nt) gradually reduced the activity to the level of the wt ribozyme, Insertion of a longer linker, up to 11 nt, resulted in the reduction of activity to one half of that of the wt ribozyme. The ribozyme with a single nucleotide insertion at the hinge region seems to form a more suitable conformation for catalysis by three-dimensional fold-back of the loop B to loop A containing the cleavage site. The trans mutant, in which the A and B domains were physically separated, maintained a significant level of activity, suggesting that both domains are necessary for catalysis, but separable. These results demonstrate that interaction between the A and B domains results in catalysis.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Shin, C., Choi, J. N., Song, S. I., Song, J. T., Ahn, J. H., Lee, J. S., & Choi, Y. D. (1996). The loop B domain is physically separable from the loop A domain in the hairpin ribozyme. Nucleic Acids Research, 24(14), 2685–2689. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/24.14.2685
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.