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ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Research aimed at teasing apart
the workings of RNA enzymes eventually may lead to ways of monitoring
fat metabolism and might even assist in the search for signs of life
on Mars, according to University of Michigan researcher Nils Walter.
His latest work was published online in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences June 24.
Walter and associates at U-M and colleague Xiaowei
Zhuang and associates at Harvard University, use techniques that allow
them to study single molecules of RNA enzymes, also known as ribozymes.
Like the more familiar protein enzymes, RNA enzymes accelerate
chemical reactions inside cells. Researchers want to learn how changes
in ribozyme molecules affect their activity, both to better understand
how evolution has shaped ribozymes to carry out their duties and to
find ways of manipulating them for useful purposes.
In the recent research, Walter's group combined a
technique called single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy
transfer (FRET) with mathematical simulations to study a ribozyme
involved in the replication of a tobacco-infecting virus. Just as a
protein enzyme is not a static structure, a ribozyme also changes
shape, cycling back and forth between its compact, catalytically
active form and its inactive, extended form. Single-molecule FRET
allowed the researchers to directly observe and measure how quickly
the ribozyme switched forms and how these rates changed when various
parts of the molecule were altered.
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Studying RNA enzymes. The graph in the
foreground shows how the enzyme's catalytic activity is related to
the rates at which the molecule folds and unfolds. These rates
were measured by single-molecule fluorescence microscopy, where
individual molecules light up as bright spots shown in the
background. Also depicted, top right, is a ribbon-and-stick
representation of the crystal structure of the folded RNA enzyme. |
With the addition of mathematical simulations, the
researchers also could investigate how changing parts of the ribozyme
molecule affected its ability to catalyze chemical reactions. They
were surprised to find that modifications they made anywhere on the
molecule---even far from the site where the chemical reaction
occurs---affected the rate of catalysis.
That's much like what is known to happen in protein
enzymes, but until now there was no evidence that ribozymes behaved
similarly, said Walter, a Dow Corning Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
"It's been known for a couple of years now that if
you modify something on a protein enzyme that you think is pretty far
away from the catalytic core---where the chemistry is actually
happening---you see that the chemistry is affected directly," Walter
said. "This has led to the idea that there is a network of motions
that make a protein enzyme act as a whole. We are proposing for the
first time that this also happens with RNA enzymes."
Getting a grasp on how ribozymes work is important
for answering fundamental questions of biology, Walter said, but the
work may also lead to practical applications. In particular, Walter
and U-M collaborators Robert T. Kennedy, the Hobart H. Willard
Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacology, and Jens-Christian Meiners,
assistant professor of physics and assistant research scientist,
Biophysics Research Division, are exploring their use as biosensors.
The idea is to selectively turn on a ribozyme molecule that catalyzes
a reaction to generate a product that gives off a specific fluorescent
signal only when a particular type of molecule binds.
"When you can do that on the single-molecule level,
as we can do now, then you have the smallest possible biosensor,"
Walter said. Such sensors could be designed to detect important
hormones like leptin, which is involved in fat metabolism. With such a
tool, "you could detect how a single cell makes leptin and ask how
much the cell makes when the environment changes," he said.
In another project, funded by NASA, the researchers
hope to develop a biosensor that could be sent to Mars to snoop around
for amino acids or other signs that life might once have existed on
the planet.
"These projects are still in the development stage,"
Walter said. "But the technology we are developing here to ask some
fundamental biological questions will ultimately help us learn how to
design biological sensors with many potential applications." |