Abstract
Ribozymes are catalytic RNAs present in modern genomes but considered as remnants of a prebiotic RNA world. The paradigmatic hammerhead ribozyme (HHR) is a small self-cleaving motif widespread from bacterial to human genomes. Here, we report that most of the classical type I HHRs frequently found in the genomes of diverse animals are contained within a novel family of non-autonomous non-LTR retrotransposons. These retroelements are expressed as abundant linear and circular RNAs of ~170-400 nt in different animal tissues. In vitro analyses confirm an efficient self-cleavage of the HHRs harboured in invertebrate retrozymes, whereas those in retrozymes of vertebrates, such as the axolotl, require to act as dimeric motifs to reach higher self-cleavage rates. Ligation assays of retrozyme RNAs with a protein ligase versus HHR self-ligation indicate that, most likely, tRNA ligases and not the ribozymes are involved in the step of RNA circularization. Altogether, these results confirm the existence of a new and conserved pathway in animals and, likely, in eukaryotes in general, for the efficient biosynthesis of RNA circles through small ribozymes, which will allow the development of biotechnological tools in the emerging field of circRNAs.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory