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RIBOZYME SNAPSHOTS By
Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
New Haven, CT (10/19/96)-
New X-ray crystallography "snapshots" of ribozymes will aid
research ranging from the search for the origins of life to the
latest genetic engineering efforts, report Yale researchers.
Click for More Graphics
Ribozymes are specialized ribonucleic acid (RNA) molecules with
enzyme-like properties. Their discovery earned Dr. Thomas Cech
(Howard Hughes Medical Institute/University of Colorado) and
Yale University biochemist Sidney Altman the 1989 Nobel Prize in
chemistry. The discovery of ribozymes overturned the DNA-dogma
that only proteins can trigger cell activity and helped clarify
the "DNA/RNA-chicken or egg" questions about life's origins,
since they are able to provide both the genetic code and the
necessary activity for reproduction in one compact package.
Previously, most RNA molecules were thought to be passive
genetic messengers responsible only for transcribing genetic
code from DNA molecules and carrying that code to other sites in
the cell for the production of proteins. The discovery that
ribozymes could fold themselves directly into biologically
active molecules following a self-contained genetic blueprint
shook the world of biology.
"This capability to serve as a catalyst makes ribozymes a good
candidate for being the first method of genetic reproduction and
may provide the missing link in our understanding of how the
earliest life forms could have evolved," says Dr. Yale
biochemist Jennifer Doudna, assistant professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry.
Recent Yale research by Dr. Doudna and colleagues yielded images
showing how the ribozymes fold into a complex molecules capable
of triggering cell activity. The new X-ray crystallography
snapshots capture one-half of a self-splicing ribozyme molecule,
revealing a compact, hairpin-shaped structure that is secured by
two chemical clamps. The experiments were performed on
ribozymes that cut and splice RNA in single-cell "Tetrahymena".
The discovery could help scientists design new drugs to fight
lethal viruses, including the AIDS virus, and repair genetic
errors that cause diseases ranging from cystic fibrosis to
muscular dystrophy and sickle cell anemia. Ribozymes of the
type depicted in this new research are already being developed
to function as precision scissors that snip out flawed genetic
segments from other RNA molecules and splice in corrected
versions. The RNA scissors also can cut a virus's genetic code
to shreds so it can't replicate.
The self-splicing ribozyme is by far the largest RNA molecule to
have part of its 3-D chemical structure solved by X-ray
crystallography in atomic detail. The resulting images provide
insights into why an RNA molecule can arrange itself into a
biologically active molecule while DNA apparently cannot.
The images also have enough detail to help guide genetic
engineering, Professor Doudna said, and show the 3-D composition
of a recurring motif in all ribozymes -- a chemical unit that
makes up one blade of the scissors that snip genetic code.
Resolution of the images is precise to 2.8 Angstroms, which is
the width of one water molecule, or about three atoms.
"We found that this RNA molecule, which has about 9,500 atoms,
contains two regions of contact that hold the two halves of the
molecular structure together," Professor Doudna said.
"We also found that numerous metal ions-- specifically
magnesium ions -- provide a scaffolding that stabilizes the
structure. RNA also has a functional chemical group called a
two-prime hydroxyl that can make numerous contacts to provide
stability. That is one of the keys to why RNA can fold while
DNA cannot."
According to Francois Michel and Eric Westhof, French
biochemists, commenting in the journal Science, the images are
"teeming with exciting detail.....Now that the structural
database for RNA is rapidly expanding, the prospects look
brighter for eventually predicting RNA three-dimensional
structure from its sequence" of chemical building blocks,
without requiring complicated imaging methods.
"It would be an important accomplishment to solve an RNA
structure simply by knowing its genetically specified sequence
of nucleotides," Professor Doudna said. "If we had that kind of
understanding of how atoms arrange themselves in three
dimensions, it would not only speed drug design but also give us
insights into how to fix genetic defects."
BACKGROUND (Courtesy Yale University)
The Process of Mapping Molecules with X-ray Crystallography
- E. coli bacteria are turned into "factories" for producing
large amounts of rare proteins. The technique, called cloning,
involves inserting a specific gene segment, which encodes the
protein, into a single bacterium. Millions of identical copies
are made as the bacteria reproduce.
- The cloned protein is purified and then crystallized.
During the next step -- crystallography -- an X-ray beam passes
through the crystals and is diffracted onto a detector, which
records X-ray intensities as the crystal is rotated into many
different orientations. These recordings are combined to
produce a three-dimensional representation.
- A cluster of Unix workstations serves the function of a
lens to generate numerical data from which an image can be
created. The data contain information about the locations of
electrons in the molecule that can be used to calculate an
"electron density map."
- Advanced Unix computer servers convert the numerical density
map into a visual 3-D representation, Using Silicon Graphics
3-D workstations, laboratory researchers fit a "backbone"
through the electron locations to show how atoms are arranged in
the molecule.
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