Tagging ribozyme reaction sites to follow trans-splicing in mammalian cells
- PMID: 8640554
- DOI: 10.1038/nm0696-643
Tagging ribozyme reaction sites to follow trans-splicing in mammalian cells
Abstract
In mammalian cells, genetic instructions are usually revised by RNA splicing before they are translated to proteins. Here we demonstrate that a trans-splicing group I ribozyme can be employed to intentionally modify the sequence of targeted transcripts in tissue culture cells. By analyzing the ribozyme reaction products, we demonstrate that targeted trans-splicing can proceed in murine fibroblasts with high fidelity, providing direct evidence that ribozymes function as anticipated in a therapeutically relevant setting. Trans-splicing is not very specific however, and the ribozyme reacted with and tagged a variety of cellular transcripts with its 3' exon sequence. RNA tagging provides a unique approach to study RNA catalysis in mammalian cells. Such analysis should facilitate the logical development of safe, therapeutic ribozymes that can repair mutant RNAs associated with a variety of inherited diseases.
Comment in
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Ribozyme trans-splicing and RNA tagging: following the messenger.Nat Med. 1996 Jun;2(6):641-2. doi: 10.1038/nm0696-641. Nat Med. 1996. PMID: 8640553 No abstract available.
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