Like most proteins, complex RNA molecules often are
modular objects mad up of distinct structural and functional
domains. The component domains of a protein can associate in
alternative combinations to form molecules with different functions.
These observations raise the possibility that complex RNAs also
can be assembled from preexisting structural and functional domains.
To test this hypothesis, an in vitro evolution procedure
was used to isolate a previously undescribed class of complex
ligase ribozymes, starting from a pool of 1016 different
RNA molecules that contained a constant region derived from a
large structural domain that occurs within self-splicing group
I ribozymes. Attached to this constant region were three hypervariable
regions, totaling 85 nucleotides, that gave rise to the catalytic
motif within the evolved catalysts. The ligase ribozymes catalyze
formation of 3',5'-phosphodiester linkage between adjacent template-bound
oligonucleotides, one bearing a 3' hydroxyl and the other a 5'
triphosphate. Ligation occurs in the context of a Watson-Crick
duplex, with a catalytic rate of 0.26 min,-1 under
optimal conditions. The constant region is essential for catalytic
activity and appears to retain the tertiary structure of the
group I ribozyme. This work demonstrates that complex RNA molecules,
like their protein counterparts, can share common structural
domains while exhibiting distinct catalytic functions.
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