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      Isolation of new ribozymes from a large pool of random sequences [see comment].

      Science (New York, N.Y.)
      Base Sequence, Biological Evolution, Catalysis, Kinetics, Magnesium, metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Oligoribonucleotides, RNA, RNA Ligase (ATP), chemistry, isolation & purification, RNA, Catalytic, Temperature, Templates, Genetic

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          Abstract

          An iterative in vitro selection procedure was used to isolate a new class of catalytic RNAs (ribozymes) from a large pool of random-sequence RNA molecules. These ribozymes ligate two RNA molecules that are aligned on a template by catalyzing the attack of a 3'-hydroxyl on an adjacent 5'-triphosphate--a reaction similar to that employed by the familiar protein enzymes that synthesize RNA. The corresponding uncatalyzed reaction also yields a 3',5'-phosphodiester bond. In vitro evolution of the population of new ribozymes led to improvement of the average ligation activity and the emergence of ribozymes with reaction rates 7 million times faster than the uncatalyzed reaction rate.

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