Improving the Ribozyme Toolbox
From Structure-Function Insights to Synthetic Biology Applications release_rusfs3cnkjaltftc4fbdmsjsxm

by Jessica Michelle Roberts

Published by Boise State University, Albertsons Library.

Abstract

Self-cleaving ribozymes are a naturally occurring class of catalytically active RNA molecules which cleave their own phosphate backbone. In nature, self-cleaving ribozymes are best known for their role in processing concatamers of viral genomes into monomers during viral replication in some RNA viruses, but to a lesser degree have also been implicated in mRNA regulation and processing in bacteria and eukaryotes. In addition to their biological relevance, these RNA enzymes have been harnessed as important biomolecular tools with a variety of applications in fields such as bioengineering. Self-cleaving ribozymes are relatively small and easy to generate in the lab using common molecular biology approaches, and have therefore been accessible and well exploited model systems used to interrogate RNA sequence-structure-function relationships. Furthermore, self-cleaving ribozymes are also being implemented as parts in the development of various biomolecular tools such as biosensors and gene regulatory elements. While much progress has been made in these areas, there are still challenges associated with the performance and implementation of such tools. The work contained in this dissertation aims to address several of these challenges and improve the ribozyme toolbox in several diverse areas. Chapter one provides an introduction to pertinent background information for this dissertation. Chapter two aims to improve the ribozyme toolbox by providing and analyzing new high-throughput sequence-structure-function data sets on five different self-cleaving ribozymes, and identifying how trends in epistasis relate to distinct structural elements. Chapter three uses such high-throughput data to train machine learning models that accurately predict the historically difficult to predict functional effects of higher order mutations in functional RNA's. Finally, in chapter four, I developed a biologically relevant platform to study the real time performance and kinetics of self-cleaving ribozyme-based gene regulatory elements directly at the site of transcription in mammalian cells.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   8.3 MB
file_p6ghafhyibfofkklenabn7ntbq
scholarworks.boisestate.edu (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  thesis
Stage   published
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: f2b376f2-2df5-41b5-acca-1684f5090eb5
API URL: JSON