We previously reported the in vitro selection
of a general-purpose RNA-cleaving DNA enzyme that exhibits a
catalytic efficiency (kcat/KM) exceeding
that of any other know nucleic acid enzyme [Santoro, S.W. and
Joyce, G.F. (1997) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 94,
4262-4266]. This enzyme contains ~30 deoxynucleotides and can
cleave almost any RNA substrate under simulated physiological
conditions, recognizing the substrate through two Watson-Crick
binding domains. The kinetics of cleavage under conditions of
varying pH, choice of divalent metal cofactor, and divalent metal
concentration are consistent with a chemical mechanism involving
metal-assisted deprotonation of a 2'-hydroxyl of the substrate,
leading to substrate cleavage. Kinetic measurements reveal that
the enzyme strongly prefers cleavage of the substrate over ligation
of the two cleavage products and that the enzyme's catalytic
efficiency is limited by the rate of substrate binding. The enzyme
displays a high level of substrate specificity, discriminating
against RNAs that contain a single base mismatch within either
of the two substrate-recognition domains. With appropriate design
of the substrate-recognition domains, the enzyme exhibits a potent
combination of high substrate sequence specificity and selectivity,
high catalytic efficiency, and rapid catalytic turnover.
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