AbstractBackground: RNA and DNA are polymers that lack the diversity of chemical functionalities that make proteins so suited to biological catalysis. All naturally occurring ribozymes (RNA catalysts) that catalyze the formation, transfer and hydrolysis of phosphodiesters require metal-ion cofactors for their catalytic activity. We wished to investigate whether, and to what extent, DNA molecules could catalyze the cleavage (by either hydrolysis or transesterification) of a ribonucleotide phosphodiester in the absence of divalent or higher-valent metal ions or, indeed, any other cofactors.Results: We performed in vitro selection and amplification experiments on a library of random-sequence DNA that incorporated a single ribonucleotide, a sui...
We recently used in vitro selection to identify many deoxyribozymes that catalyze DNA phosphodiester...
Ribozymes are widespread, and catalyze some extremely important reactions in the cell. Mechanistical...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, February 2003.Includes bib...
AbstractBackground: RNA and DNA are polymers that lack the diversity of chemical functionalities tha...
AbstractBackground: Ribozymes catalyze an important set of chemical transformations in metabolism, a...
Since the initial discovery of ribozymes in the early 1980s, catalytic nucleic acids have been used ...
AbstractBackground: The catalytic activity of RNA enzymes is thought to require divalent metal ions,...
AbstractDNA is generally considered to be chemically rather inert, but self-cleaving DNA molecules h...
AbstractThe hairpin ribozyme catalyzes a reversible phosphodiester cleavage reaction. We examined th...
This thesis reports the results of experiments designed to help elucidate the catalytic mechanisms o...
AbstractBackground: Ribozymes are biological catalysts that promote the hydrolysis and transesterifi...
AbstractAlthough DNA has not been found responsible for biological catalysis, many artificial DNA en...
AbstractBackground: An 18-nucleotide DNA oligomer, PS2.M, derived using an in vitro selection method...
AbstractBackground: Previously we demonstrated that DNA can act as an enzyme in the Pb2+-dependent c...
AbstractBackground: Hairpin ribozymes (RNA enzymes) catalyze the same chemical reaction as ribonucle...
We recently used in vitro selection to identify many deoxyribozymes that catalyze DNA phosphodiester...
Ribozymes are widespread, and catalyze some extremely important reactions in the cell. Mechanistical...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, February 2003.Includes bib...
AbstractBackground: RNA and DNA are polymers that lack the diversity of chemical functionalities tha...
AbstractBackground: Ribozymes catalyze an important set of chemical transformations in metabolism, a...
Since the initial discovery of ribozymes in the early 1980s, catalytic nucleic acids have been used ...
AbstractBackground: The catalytic activity of RNA enzymes is thought to require divalent metal ions,...
AbstractDNA is generally considered to be chemically rather inert, but self-cleaving DNA molecules h...
AbstractThe hairpin ribozyme catalyzes a reversible phosphodiester cleavage reaction. We examined th...
This thesis reports the results of experiments designed to help elucidate the catalytic mechanisms o...
AbstractBackground: Ribozymes are biological catalysts that promote the hydrolysis and transesterifi...
AbstractAlthough DNA has not been found responsible for biological catalysis, many artificial DNA en...
AbstractBackground: An 18-nucleotide DNA oligomer, PS2.M, derived using an in vitro selection method...
AbstractBackground: Previously we demonstrated that DNA can act as an enzyme in the Pb2+-dependent c...
AbstractBackground: Hairpin ribozymes (RNA enzymes) catalyze the same chemical reaction as ribonucle...
We recently used in vitro selection to identify many deoxyribozymes that catalyze DNA phosphodiester...
Ribozymes are widespread, and catalyze some extremely important reactions in the cell. Mechanistical...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology, February 2003.Includes bib...