Abstract:
In vitro selection techniques were applied to the development of a DNA enzyme that contains three catalytically essential imidazole groups and catalyzes the cleavage of RNA substrates. Nucleic acid libraries for selection were constructed by polymerase-catalyzed incorporation of C5-imidazole-functionalized deoxyuridine in place of thymidine. Chemical synthesis was used to define a minimized catalytic domain composed of only 12 residues. The catalytic domain forms a compact hairpin structure that displays the three imidazole-containing residues. The enzyme can be made to cleave RNAs of almost any sequence by simple alteration of the two substrate-recognition domains that surround the catalytic domain. The enzyme operates with multiple turnover in the presence of micromolar concentrations of Zn2+, exhibiting saturation kinetics and a catalytic rate of >1 min-1. The imidazole-containing DNA enzyme, one of the smallest known nucleic acid enzymes, combines the substrate-recognition properties of nucleic acid enzymes and the chemical functionality of protein enzymes in a molecule that is small, yet versatile and catalytically efficient.
DNAzymes linked to this article:
Name | Isolated sequence | Length | Reaction |
---|---|---|---|
16.2-3 | CCCGAGGCACCAATCCTTCGTTGAGCTCTTACTCGGTGAAACGGCCGCTA | 50 | RNA cleavage |
16.2-11 | CCCAGAAGGCCGAAACCGCTTCGTTGACCCCTTGCTCTAGGGTTACTAGG | 50 | RNA cleavage |
16.2-12 | GACAGCAATATCTTCGTTGACCCCTTGCTCTATATAGCCTTCAGGCCCCC | 50 | RNA cleavage |
16.3-4 | CACACGGGACGCATCGGACTTCGTTGAGCACTTACTCTAGCCGCGCCCAT | 50 | RNA cleavage |
16.4-3 | CCACACCGTACACCAGCTCGAGGTTGGGCACCTACTCTAACACCAGCGGT | 50 | RNA cleavage |
16.4-4 | GGGACAAATTGGCCATTAGCCCCTTCGTTGAGCACGCTACACTAGGCCCA | 50 | RNA cleavage |