Ribozyme catalysis experiments were done by the addition of MgCl2 and stopped for measurement at each time point by the addition of a stop solution containing urea and EDTA. A plot of the
kobs values measured at pH 7.5 with increasing concentrations of Mg2+. There is a sharp increase in ribozyme function that plateaus as the concentration approaches 10 mM. The steep slope observed at lower Mg2+ concentrations suggests that more than one metal ion is necessary for each RNA to achieve maximal ribozyme activity. Moreover, this suggests that the construct requires higher than normal physiological concentrations of Mg2+ to become completely saturated with Mg2+ as the cofactor. It is possible that native unimolecular constructs, also carrying P0, might achieve saturation at concentrations of Mg2+ that are closer to normal physiological levels. The effect of pH on ribozyme rate constant in reactions containing 10 mM Mg2+ was also experimentally measured. pH-dependent ribozyme activity increases linearly with a slope of 1 until reaching a
kobs, of a
Michaelis-Menten plot, plateau of ~4/min near a pH value of 7.5. Any higher pH has the same catalytic effect and more acidic pH's begin denaturing the ribozyme and thus reducing catalytic function. Both the pH dependency and the maximum rate constant have interesting implications for the possible catalytic strategies used by this ribozyme class.
The effects of various mono- and divalent metal ions on Hatchet ribozyme activity The Hatchet ribozyme construct remains completely inactive when incubated in the absence of Mg2+ in reactions containing only other monovalent cations at 1 M (Na+, K+, Rb+, Li+, Cs+), 2.5 M (Na+, K+), or 3 M (Li+). In contrast, other divalent metal ions such as Mn2+, Co2+, Zn2+, and Cd2+ support ribozyme function with varying levels of efficiency. Furthermore, two metal ions (Zn2+, Cd2+) function only at low concentrations, and three metal ions (Ba2+, Ni2+, and Cu2+) inhibit activity at 0.5 mM, even when Mg2+ is present. These results indicate that Hatchet ribozymes are relatively restrictive in their use of cations to promote catalysis, perhaps indicating that one or more specialized binding sites that accommodate a limited number of divalent cations are present in the RNA structure or perhaps even at the active site. Inhibition by certain divalent metal ions could be due to the displacement of critical Mg2+ ions or by general disruption of RNA folding. == Significance/Applications ==