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Ribozyme-catalyzed excision of targeted sequences from within RNAs.

Author
Abstract
:

We demonstrate that a group I intron-derived ribozyme from the opportunistic pathogen Pneumocystis carinii can bind an RNA in trans and excise from within it an internal segment, resulting in the splicing of the remaining ends of the RNA back together (the trans excision-splicing reaction). The reaction is intramolecular with regard to substrate. The ribozyme targets its substrate by base pairing with two or three noncontiguous regions on the substrate, and the reaction occurs through a nucleotide cofactor independent mechanism. The excised segment can be as long as 28 nucleotides, or more, and as little as one nucleotide. The potential usefulness of this reaction is demonstrated by engineering a ribozyme that excises the triplet-repeat expansion region from a truncated myotonic dystrophy protein kinase transcript mimic in vitro.

Year of Publication
:
2002
Journal
:
Biochemistry
Volume
:
41
Issue
:
51
Number of Pages
:
15327-33
Date Published
:
2002
ISSN Number
:
0006-2960
URL
:
https://doi.org/10.1021/bi0267386
DOI
:
10.1021/bi0267386
Short Title
:
Biochemistry
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