Background: In vitro evolution has been used to obtain
nulceic acid molecules with interesting functional properties.
The evolution process usually is carried out in a stepwise manner,
involving successive rounds of selection, amplification and mutation.
Recently, a continuous in vitro evolution system was devised
for RNAs that catalyze the ligation of oligonucleotide substrates,
allowing the evolution of catalytic function to be studied in
real time.
Results: Continuous in vitro evolution of an RNA ligase
ribozyme was carried out in the presence of a DNA enzyme that
was capable of cleaving, and thereby inactivating, the ribozyme.
The DNA concentration was increased steadily over 33.5 hours
of evolution, reaching a final concentration that would have
been sufficient to inactivate the starting population in one
second. The evolved population of ribozymes developed resistance
to the DNA enzyme, reducing their vulnerability to cleavage by
2000-fold but retaining their own catalytic function. Based on
sequencing and kinetic analysis of the ribozymes, two mechanisms
are proposed for this resistance. One involves three nucleotide
substitutions, together with two compensatory mutations, that
alter the site at which the DNA enzyme binds the ribozyme. The
other involved enhancement of the ribozyme's ability to bind
its own substrate in a way that protects it from cleavage by
the DNA enzyme.
Conclusions: The ability to direct the evolution of an enzyme's
biochemical properties in response to the behavior of another
macromolecule provides insight into the evolution of resistance
and may be useful in developing enzymes with novel or enhanced
function.