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Ribonucleic acid (RNA)
– the biomolecule which can do it
all
Sidney Altman and
Thomas Cech have independently studied how the
genetic code is transferred from DNA to RNA. They
knew, however, that part of the genetic information
is not required and must be removed from RNA before
the RNA molecule can be utilized by the cell. While
searching for the catalysts of RNA maturation, Altman
and Cech discovered that these enzymes were composed
of catalytic RNA, and not of protein.
Sidney Altman studied
the enzyme RNase P, which is found in e.g. intestinal
bacteria. RNase P activates a special kind of RNA
molecule called tRNA (transfer RNA) by removing a
portion which is unnecessary for its function. The
enzyme RNase P has the unusual property of containing
not only a protein molecule, but an RNA molecule as
well. Surprisingly Altman demonstrated that it is the
RNA molecule which acts as a
biocatalyst.
Thomas Cech studied an
RNA molecule from the primitive unicellular animal
Tetrahymena. He discovered that an unnecessary
piece of RNA is removed from the middle of this
molecule and that the loose ends thus formed are then
joined together. It created a sensation when he
showed that the RNA molecule itself catalyzes this
reaction. The portion of the RNA molecule which is
removed modifies itself subsequently so that it can
function, among other things, as an RNA-synthesizing
enzyme. This means that catalytic RNA can also
make new RNA.
The work of both
Altman and Cech indicates that the catalytic
capacities of RNA molecules are intimately dependent
on their three-dimensional structures, as is the case
with enzyme proteins.
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