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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol 91, 6093-6097, Copyright © 1994 by National Academy of Sciences
RR Breaker and GF Joyce
The technique of self-sustained sequence replication allows isothermal
amplification of DNA and RNA molecules in vitro. This method relies on the
activities of a reverse transcriptase and a DNA-dependent RNA polymerase to
amplify specific nucleic acid sequences. We have modified this protocol to
allow selective amplification of RNAs that catalyze a particular chemical
reaction. During an in vitro RNA evolution experiment employing this
modified system, a unique class of "selfish" RNAs emerged and replicated to
the exclusion of the intended RNAs. Members of this class of selfish
molecules, termed RNA Z, amplify efficiently despite their inability to
catalyze the target chemical reaction. Their amplification requires the
action of both reverse transcriptase and RNA polymerase and involves the
synthesis of both DNA and RNA replication intermediates. The proposed
amplification mechanism for RNA Z involves the formation of a DNA hairpin
that functions as a template for transcription by RNA polymerase. This
arrangement links the two strands of the DNA, resulting in the production
of RNA transcripts that contain an embedded RNA polymerase promoter
sequence.
ARTICLE
Emergence of a Replicating Species from an in vitro RNA Evolution Reaction
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