Hammerhead ribozyme is the smallest and best characterized catalytic RNA-cleaving ribozyme. It has been reported as potential therapeutic tools to manipulate the expression of target genes. However, most of naturally occurring hammerhead ribozymes process self-cleavage rather than cleave substrate RNA in trans, and its high intracellular activity relies on the tertiary interaction of Loop II and steam I bulge, resulting in decreased performance as applied in gene silencing. We described a direct intracellular selection method to evolve hammerhead variants based on trans-cleavage mode via using a toxin gene as the reporter. And a dual fluorescence proteins system has also been established to quantitatively evaluate the efficiency of selected ribozymes in the cell. Based on this selection strategy, we obtained three mutants with enhanced intracellular cleaving activity compared to wide type hammerhead ribozyme. The best one, TX-2 was revealed to possess better and consistent gene knockdown ability at different positions on diverse targeted mRNA either in prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells than wild-type hammerhead ribozyme. These observations imply the efficiency of the intracellular selection method of the trans-acting ribozyme and the potentials of improved ribozyme variants for research and therapeutic purposes.
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.