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Rational design of self-cleaving pre-tRNA-ribonuclease P RNA conjugates


Rational design of self-cleaving pre-tRNA-ribonuclease P RNA conjugates.

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Ribonuclease P (RNaseP) generates the mature 5' end of tRNAs by removing 5'leader sequences from pre-tRNAs. In vitro, the RNA subunit is sufficient to catalyze this reaction and is therefore a ribozyme. The kinetic analysis of RNase P-mediated catalysis is complicated because product release is normally rate-limiting. Furthermore, the intermolecular nature of the cleavage reaction precludes many applications of in vitro selection schemes to the analysis of RNaseP. To examine and manipulate the RNase P function more effectively, we designed a pair of ribozymes in which the RNase P RNA is covalently linked to a pre-tRNA substrate. To facilitate intramolecular cleavage, pre-tRNA molecules were tethered to circulatory permuted RNaseP RNA molecules at nucleotides implicated in substrate binding. These active-site-tethered pre-tRNA-RNaseP RNA conjugates undergo accurate and efficient self-cleavage in vitro, with first-order reaction rates equivalent to the rate of the chemical step of the native RNase P reaction. Unlike most ribozymes, RNase P recognizes its substrate through tertiary RNA-RNA interactions, rather than through extensive Watson-Crick base-pairing. However, the development of the active-site-tethered conjugates has led us to create a sequence-specific endonuclease, termed Endo.P. In the Endo.P configuration, the 3'half of the pre-tRNA acceptor stem binds exogenous RNA substrates via Watson-Crick base-pairing; the bound substrate is subsequently cleaved at the predicted site. The demonstration of sequence-specific cleavage by Endo.P expands the potential of RNase P and its derivatives as reagents in gene therapy.


Frank DN, Harris ME, Pace NR

Biochemistry

1994-09-06 00:00

33

35

10800-8

Base Sequence,Binding Sites,Endoribonucleases,Hydrogen Bonding,Molecular Sequence Data,Nucleic Acid Conformation,Oligodeoxyribonucleotides,RNA Precursors,RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional,RNA, Catalytic,RNA, Transfer,Ribonuclease P,Oligodeoxyribonucleotides,RNA Precursors,RNA, Catalytic,RNA, Transfer,Endoribonucleases,Ribonuclease P

Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington 47405

Biochemistry

NIGMS GM 15979, NIGMS GM 34527

0006-2960




969

True

8075082

Daniel Frank
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