• Title of article

    Evidence for the metal-cofactor independence of an RNA phosphodiester-cleaving DNA enzyme Original Research Article

  • Author/Authors

    C. Ronald Geyer، نويسنده , , Dipankar Sen، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    579
  • To page
    593
  • Abstract
    Background: RNA and DNA are polymers that lack the diversity of chemical functionalities that make proteins so suited to biological catalysis. All naturally occurring ribozymes (RNA catalysts) that catalyze the formation, transfer and hydrolysis of phosphodiesters require metal-ion cofactors for their catalytic activity. We wished to investigate whether, and to what extent, DNA molecules could catalyze the cleavage (by either hydrolysis or transesterification) of a ribonucleotide phosphodiester in the absence of divalent or higher-valent metal ions or, indeed, any other cofactors. Results: We performed in vitro selection and amplification experiments on a library of random-sequence DNA that incorporated a single ribonucleotide, a suitable site for cleavage. Following 12 cycles of selection and amplification, a ‘first generation’ of DNA enzymes (DNAzymes) cleaved their internal ribonucleotide phosphodiesters at rates ∼ 107-fold faster than the spontaneous rate of cleavage of the dinucleotide ApA in the absence of divalent cations. Re-selection from a partially randomized DNA pool yielded ‘second generation’ DNAzymes that self-cleaved at rates of ∼ 0.01 min−1 (a 108-fold rate enhancement over the cleavage rate of ApA). The properties of these selected catalysts were different in key respects from those of metal-utilizing ribozymes and DNAzymes. The catalyzed cleavage took place in the presence of different chelators and ribonuclease inhibitors. Trace-metal analysis of the reaction buffer (containing very high purity reagents) by inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrophotometry indicated that divalent or higher-valent metal ions do not mediate catalysis by the DNAzymes. Conclusions: Our results indicate that, although ribozymes are sometimes regarded generically to be metalloenzymes, the nucleic acid components of ribozymes may play a substantial role in the overall catalysis. Given that metal cofactors increase the rate of catalysis by ribozymes only ∼ 102−103-fold above that of the DNAzyme described in this paper, it is conceivable that substrate positioning, transition-state stabilization or general acid/base catalysis by the nucleic acid components of ribozymes and DNAzymes may contribute significantly to their overall catalytic performance.
  • Journal title
    Chemistry and Biology
  • Serial Year
    1997
  • Journal title
    Chemistry and Biology
  • Record number

    1157947