Group I intron-derived ribozymes can perform a variety of catalytic reactions, including the replacement of the 3' end of a mutant RNA transcript with a corrected version of the transcript [Sullenger, B. A., and Cech, T. R. (1994) Nature 371, 619-622]. We now demonstrate in vitro that a ribozyme, derived from a Pneumocystis carinii group I intron, can replace the 5' end of a targeted exogenous RNA with an endogenous RNA. Our model system is a short synthetic mimic of a k-ras transcript, in which substitution mutations at codon 12 are implicated in a host of cancer types. In these experiments, yields of up to 70% were obtained. We analyzed the length dependence of two molecular contacts, P9.0 and P10, that occur between the ribozyme and the exogenous k-ras mimic, and determined that longer, and thus more stable, interactions result in higher product yields. Furthermore, the length of the loop region L1 can substantially influence the yield and the rate of the reaction. These results are a further demonstration that group I intron-derived ribozymes are quite malleable in terms of intermolecular recognition and catalysis, and that these properties can be exploited in developing potentially useful biochemical tools.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi047284a | DOI Listing |
PLoS Negl Trop Dis
June 2022
Arthropod Genetics Group, The Pirbright Institute, Pirbright, United Kingdom.
RNA
September 2018
Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology, Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, USA.
The quality of RNA sequencing data relies on specific priming by the primer used for reverse transcription (RT-primer). Nonspecific annealing of the RT-primer to the RNA template can generate reads with incorrect cDNA ends and can cause misinterpretation of data (RT mispriming). This kind of artifact in RNA-seq based technologies is underappreciated and currently no adequate tools exist to computationally remove them from published data sets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmino Acids
December 2012
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Cell Sciences, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA.
Based on ubiquitous presence of large ionic motifs and clusters in proteins involved in gene transcription and protein synthesis, we analyzed the distribution of ionizable sidechains in a broad selection of proteins with regulatory, metabolic, structural and adhesive functions, in agonist, antagonist, toxin and antimicrobial peptides, and in self-excising inteins and intron-derived proteins and sequence constructs. All tested groups, regardless of taxa or sequence size, show considerable segregation of ionizable sidechains into same type charge (homoionic) tracts. These segments in most cases exceed half of the sequence length and comprise more than two-thirds of all ionizable sidechains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
May 2012
Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
The trans insertion-splicing (TIS) reaction is a technique that can be used to site-specifically insert an RNA donor substrate into a separate RNA acceptor substrate. The TIS reaction, which is catalyzed by a group I intron-derived ribozyme from Pneumocystis carinii, is described with regards to system design, ribozyme preparation, and the overall protocol for conducting the TIS reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
May 2012
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Group II introns are large self-splicing ribozymes found in bacterial genomes, in organelles of plants and fungi, and even in some animal organisms. Many organellar group II introns interrupt important housekeeping genes; therefore, their splicing is critical for the survival of the host organism. Group II introns are versatile catalytic RNAs: they facilitate their own excision from a pre-mRNA, they promote ligation of exons to form a translation-competent mature mRNA; they can act like mobile genomic elements and insert themselves into RNA and DNA targets with remarkable precision, which makes them attractive tools for genetic engineering.
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