Hammerhead ribozymes are the smallest known naturally occurring ribozymes which are capable of catalyzing the endonucleolytic
trans-esterification of RNA. A recent re-examination of the catalytic properties of naturally-derived hammerhead ribozymes has resulted in a better understanding of the catalytic efficiency of this enzyme
in vitro and
in vivo. The minimal
trans-cleaving hammerhead ribozyme has been a ubiquitous tool in both genomics and therapeutics research over the last twenty years and these new insights into hammerhead ribozyme biochemistry may offer hope for the generation of improved
trans-cleaving ribozymes which function effectively
in vivo. Next-generation hammerhead ribozymes may play an important role as therapeutic agents, as enzymes which tailor defined RNA sequences, as biosensors, and for applications in functional genomics and gene discovery.
from Hean and Weinberg
in Chapter 1 from
RNA and the Regulation of Gene ExpressionFurther reading:
RNA and the Regulation of Gene ExpressionLabels: biosensor, genomics, hammerhead ribozyme, regulation, ribozyme, ribozymes, RNA, therapeutics