In vivo selection was used to improve the activity of the
Tetrahymena pre-rRNA self-splicing intron in the context
of heterologous exons. The intron was engineered into a kanamycin
nucleotidyltransferase gene, with the pairing between intron
bases and the 5′ and 3′ splice sites maintained.
The initial construct failed to confer kanamycin resistance
on Escherichia coli, although the pre-mRNA was active
in splicing in vitro. Random mutation libraries were constructed
to identify active intron variants in E. coli. All
the active mutants sequenced contained mutations disrupting
a base-paired region above the paired region P1 (referred to
as the P1 extension region or P1ex) that involves the very 5′
end of the intron. Subsequent site-directed mutagenesis confirmed
that these P1ex mutations are responsible and sufficient to
activate the intron splicing in E. coli. Thus, it appears
that too strong of a secondary structure in the P1ex element
can be inhibitory to splicing in vivo. In vitro splicing assays
demonstrated that two P1ex mutant constructs splice six to eight
times faster than the designed construct at 40 μM GTP
concentration. The relative reaction rates of the mutant constructs
compared to the original design are further increased at a lower
GTP concentration. Possible mechanisms by which the disrupted
P1ex structure could influence splicing rates are discussed.
This study emphasizes the value of using libraries of random
mutations to improve the activity of ribozymes in heterologous
contexts in vivo.