RNA self-splicing by engineered hairpin ribozyme variants

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Abstract

Small RNAs capable of self-cleavage and ligation might have been the precursors for the much more complex self-splicing group I and II introns in an early RNA world. Here, we demonstrate the activity of engineered hairpin ribozyme variants, which as self-splicing introns are removed from their parent RNA. In the process, two cleavage reactions are supported at the two intron-exon junctions, followed by ligation of the two generated exon fragments. As a result, the hairpin ribozyme, here acting as the self-splicing intron, is cut out. Two self-splicing hairpin ribozyme variants were investigated, one designed by hand, the other by a computer-aided approach. Both variants perform self-splicing, generating a cut-out intron and ligated exons.

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Hieronymus, R., Zhu, J., & Müller, S. (2022). RNA self-splicing by engineered hairpin ribozyme variants. Nucleic Acids Research, 50(1), 368–377. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkab1239

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