The hammerhead ribozyme carries out a very simple chemical reaction that results in the breakage of the substrate strand of RNA, specifically at C17, the cleavage-site nucleotide. Although RNA cleavage is often referred to as
hydrolysis, the mechanism employed does not in fact involve the addition of
water. Rather, the cleavage reaction is simply an
isomerization that consists of rearrangement of the linking
phosphodiester bond. It is the same reaction, chemically, that occurs with random
base-mediated RNA degradation, except that it is highly site-specific and the rate is accelerated 10,000-fold or more.
Cleavage by phosphodiester isomerization The cleavage reaction is a
phosphodiester isomerization reaction that is initiated by abstraction of the cleavage-site
ribose 2'-hydroxyl proton from the 2'-oxygen, which then becomes the attacking
nucleophile in an "in-line" or
SN2(P)-like reaction, although it is not known whether this proton is removed prior to or during the chemical step of the hammerhead cleavage reaction. (The cleavage reaction is technically not
bimolecular, but behaves in the same way a genuine SN2(P) reaction does; it undergoes
inversion of configuration subsequent to forming an associative
transition-state consisting of a pentacoordinated oxyphosphrane.) The attacking and
leaving group oxygens will both occupy the two axial positions in the
trigonal bipyramidal transition-state structure as is required for an SN2-like reaction mechanism. The 5'-product, as a result of this cleavage reaction mechanism, possesses a 2',3'-cyclic phosphate terminus, and the 3'-product possesses a 5'-OH terminus, as with nonenzymatic alkaline cleavage of RNA. The reaction is therefore reversible, as the
scissile phosphate remains a phosphodiester, and may thus act as a substrate for hammerhead RNA-mediated ligation without a requirement for
ATP or a similar exogenous energy source. The hammerhead ribozyme-catalyzed reaction, unlike the formally identical non-enzymatic alkaline cleavage of RNA, is a highly sequence-specific cleavage reaction with a typical turnover rate of approximately 1 molecule of substrate per molecule of enzyme per minute at pH 7.5 in 10 mM Mg2+ (so-called "standard reaction conditions" for the minimal hammerhead RNA sequence), depending upon the sequence of the particular hammerhead ribozyme construct measured. This represents an approximately 10,000-fold rate enhancement over the nonenzymatic cleavage of RNA.
Requirement for divalent metal ions All
ribozymes were originally thought to be
metallo-enzymes. It was assumed that divalent metal ions like Mg2+ were thought to have two roles: Promote proper folding of RNA and to form the catalytic core. Since RNA itself did not contain enough variation in the functional groups, metal ions were thought to play a role at the
active site, as was known about proteins. The proposed mechanism for the Mg2+ ion was: the deprotonation of the 2'-OH group by a Magnesium.aqua.hydroxy complex bound by the pro-R oxygen at the phosphate-cleavage site, followed by nucleophilic attack of the resultant 2'-alkaoxide on the scissile phosphate forming a pentacoordinate phosphate intermediate. The last step is the departing of the 5' leaving group, yielding a 2',3'-cyclic phosphate with an inverted configuration. It was presumed that hexahydrated
magnesium ions, which exist in equilibrium with
magnesium hydroxide, could play the roles of
general acid and
general base, in a way analogous to those played by two
histidines in
RNase A. An additional role for divalent metal ions has also been proposed in the form of
electrostatic stabilization of the
transition-state.
Not a metallo-enzyme In 1998 it was discovered that the hammerhead ribozyme, as well as the
VS ribozyme and
hairpin ribozyme, do not require the presence of metal ions for catalysis, provided a sufficiently high concentration of
monovalent cation is present to permit the RNA to fold. This discovery suggested that the RNA itself, rather than serving as an inert, passive scaffold for the binding of chemically active divalent metal ions, is instead itself intimately involved in the chemistry of catalysis. The latest structural results, described below, indeed confirm that two invariant nucleotides, G12 and G8, are positioned consistent with roles as the general base and general acid in the hammerhead cleavage reaction. Strictly speaking, therefore, the hammerhead ribozyme cannot be a metallo-enzyme. ==Primary and secondary structure==