22 research outputs found

    The crystal structure of an all-RNA hammerhead ribozyme: a proposed mechanism for RNA catalytic cleavage.

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    We have solved the crystal structure of an all-RNA hammerhead ribozyme having a single 2'-O-methyl cytosine incorporated at the active site to prevent cleavage. The conditions used differ from those in another recent solution in four significant ways: first, it is an all-RNA ribozyme rather than a DNA-RNA hybrid; second, the connectivity of the ribozyme backbone strands is different; third, the crystals were grown in the presence of a much lower concentration of salt; and fourth, the crystal packing scheme is very different. Nevertheless, the three-dimensional structure of the all-RNA hammerhead ribozyme is similar to the previous structure. Five potential Mg(II)-binding sites are identified, including one positioned near the ribozyme catalytic pocket. Upon this basis, as well as upon comparisons with the metal-binding sites in the structurally homologous uridine turn of tRNAPhe, we propose a mechanism for RNA catalytic cleavage

    Rapid crystallization of chemically synthesized hammerhead RNAs using a double screening procedure.

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    To find conditions for obtaining diffraction-quality crystals of a hammerhead RNA rapidly and reproducibly, we employed a "double screening" procedure in which we screened six different RNA synthetic constructs against 48 crystallization conditions using a newly devised sparse matrix. We obtained crystals immediately and diffraction-quality crystals of the sixth RNA construct within six months of initiating the screening of additional RNA sequences. The best crystals diffract to 2.9 A resolution when flash-cooled at synchrotron X-ray sources. Solid-support chemical synthesis combined with sparse matrix screening should allow rapid production of diffraction-quality crystals of a variety of small RNAs, reducing the time commitment for initiating such crystallography projects from several years to several months. The synthetic approach also makes introduction of modified bases to prevent self-cleavage and to generate isomorphous heavy-atom derivative crystals a rapid and straightforward process

    Principal Types of Crystal Structures

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