Literature DB >> 17899064

Self-association of adenine-dependent hairpin ribozymes.

Yan-Li Li1, Marie-Christine Maurel, Christine Ebel, Jacques Vergne, Vitaliy Pipich, Giuseppe Zaccai.   

Abstract

Hairpin ribozymes are flexible molecules that catalyse reversible self-cleavage after the docking of two independently folded internal loops, A and B. The activities, self-association and structures in solution of two 85 base adenine-dependent hairpin ribozymes (ADHR1 and ADHR2) were studied by native gel electrophoresis, analytical centrifugation, and small angle neutron scattering. Bi-molecular RNA interactions such as linear-linear, loop-loop, loop-linear or kissing interactions have been found to be important in the control of various biological functions, and hairpin loops present rich potential for establishing both intra- and intermolecular interactions through standard Watson-Crick base pairing or non-canonical interactions. Similar results were obtained for ADHR1 and ADHR2. At room temperature, they indicated end-to-end self-association of the ribozymes in rod-like structures with a cross-section corresponding to two double strands side-by-side. Dimers, which predominate at low concentration ( approximately 0.1 mg/ml), associate into longer rods, with increasing concentration ( approximately 1 mg/ml). Above 65 degrees C, the dimers and rods dissociated into compact monomers, with a radius of gyration similar to that of tRNA (about 70 bases). The dimers were non-active for catalysis, which suggests that dimer formation, probably by preventing the correct docking of loops A and B, could act as an inhibition mechanism for the regulation of hairpin ribozyme catalysis.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17899064     DOI: 10.1007/s00249-007-0213-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Biophys J        ISSN: 0175-7571            Impact factor:   1.733


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