TY - JOUR
T1 - In vivo decay kinetic parameters of hammerhead ribozymes
AU - Sioud, Mouldy
AU - Opstad, Anne
AU - Zhao, Jiang qin
AU - Levitz, Ruth
AU - Benham, Craig
AU - Drlica, Karl
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by a grants from Gene Shears (to M.S.), the Norwegian Research Council (to M.S.), The Aaron Diamond Foundation (to K.D.), NIH (GM47012 to C.B. and AI 33337 to K.D.), and the Lucille P.Markey Charitable Trust (to K.D).
PY - 1994
Y1 - 1994
N2 - Ribozymes offer a potentially important way to inactivate Intracellular RNA from almost any gene whose nucleotlde sequence Is known. Recently, we found that hammerhead ribozymes directed against mRNA of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and Its derivatives, preferentially bind to a cellular protein(s). To better understand the effect of different 3'-terminal hairpins on ribozyme stability as well as their effect on the protein binding to the ribozyme, a mathematical treatment of the decay of three TNFα ribozymes that differed at their 3' ends was performed. One ribozyme contained a 3'-terminal hairpin derived from a transcription terminator of bacteriophage T7, another contained the same hairpin but modified to be highly enriched for G + C nucleotides, and a third lacked a hairpin. The TNFa ribozyme decay had two kinetic components. The slow component exhibited exponential decay with a half life of approximately 250 h In all cases. The 3'-termlnal hairpin has no significant effect on this component. This slow phase accounted for 60 - 80% of ribozyme decay. The rapid phase also exhibited exponential decay. For this phase, a 3'-termlnal hairpin roughly doubled the half-life (1.7 - 3.4). The slow phase of degradation was about three times faster for a ribozyme directed at the integrase mRNA of human immunodeficiency virus-1 than that seen with the TNFa ribozyme. Taken together, these results suggest that the ribozyme population is Initially sensitive to degradation, with the presence of a hairpin provides some protection, and Indicate that the addition of the hairpin to the ribozyme did not prevent the In vivo additional stabilizing effect of the protein(s).
AB - Ribozymes offer a potentially important way to inactivate Intracellular RNA from almost any gene whose nucleotlde sequence Is known. Recently, we found that hammerhead ribozymes directed against mRNA of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and Its derivatives, preferentially bind to a cellular protein(s). To better understand the effect of different 3'-terminal hairpins on ribozyme stability as well as their effect on the protein binding to the ribozyme, a mathematical treatment of the decay of three TNFα ribozymes that differed at their 3' ends was performed. One ribozyme contained a 3'-terminal hairpin derived from a transcription terminator of bacteriophage T7, another contained the same hairpin but modified to be highly enriched for G + C nucleotides, and a third lacked a hairpin. The TNFa ribozyme decay had two kinetic components. The slow component exhibited exponential decay with a half life of approximately 250 h In all cases. The 3'-termlnal hairpin has no significant effect on this component. This slow phase accounted for 60 - 80% of ribozyme decay. The rapid phase also exhibited exponential decay. For this phase, a 3'-termlnal hairpin roughly doubled the half-life (1.7 - 3.4). The slow phase of degradation was about three times faster for a ribozyme directed at the integrase mRNA of human immunodeficiency virus-1 than that seen with the TNFa ribozyme. Taken together, these results suggest that the ribozyme population is Initially sensitive to degradation, with the presence of a hairpin provides some protection, and Indicate that the addition of the hairpin to the ribozyme did not prevent the In vivo additional stabilizing effect of the protein(s).
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U2 - 10.1093/nar/22.25.5571
DO - 10.1093/nar/22.25.5571
M3 - Article
C2 - 7838709
AN - SCOPUS:0028567882
SN - 0305-1048
VL - 22
SP - 5571
EP - 5575
JO - Nucleic Acids Research
JF - Nucleic Acids Research
IS - 25
ER -