Abstract

In the past, the use of delta ribozyme as a therapeutic tool was limited because substrate specificity was thought to be determined by only 8 nucleotides. Recently, we have accumulated evidence suggesting that the substrate sequence upstream of the cleavage site, which is not involved in the binding with the delta ribozyme, appears to be essential in the selection of an appropriate cleavage site. To understand the role of this region in efficient cleavage, we synthesized a collection of small substrates that possessed single and multiple mutations in positions -1 to -4 and determined the kinetic parameters of their cleavage using a model antigenomic delta ribozyme. Some substrates were found to be uncleavage, whereas others showed >60-fold difference in relative specificity between the least and most efficiently cleaved substrates. The base at each position from -1 to -4 contributes differently to the ability of a substrate to be cleaved. An optimal sequence for positions -1 to -4 was determined to be -1HRHY(-4) (H = U, C, or A). These results shed light on new features that contribute to the substrate requirement of delta ribozyme cleavage and should increase interest in the use of this unique ribozyme.

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