Medicinal Chemistry & Chemical Biology, Short talk
MC-027

Small Ribozymes in Gut Bacteriophages and Their Potential Role in Microbiome-Virome Interactions

K. Kienbeck1, L. Malfertheiner2, S. Zelger-Paulus1, S. Johannsen1, C. von Mering2*, R. K. Sigel1*
1Department of Chemistry, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Department of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

Hepatitis delta virus (HDV)-like ribozymes belong to the class of small self-cleaving RNA enzymes, which catalyze a site-specific internal transesterification while exhibiting diverse sequences and structures [1]. However, the biological functions of these ribozymes, particularly minimal examples, remain largely unknown [2].

We computationally discovered thousands of minimal HDV-like ribozymes in bacteriophage genomes associated with the human gut. In vitro validation was performed on selected examples associated with viral tRNAs, coined theta ribozymes. We propose a novel biological function of these ribozymes, suggesting their involvement in tRNA maturation and the lytic-lysogenic switch of specific phages (Figure 1). Investigating the catalysis and regulation of theta ribozymes sheds light on the poorly understood implications of the microbiome-virome interactions of the human gut and their impact on health and disease.

Figure 1: Proposed phage infection cycle involving theta ribozymes. aaRS: aminoacyl-synthetase; int: integrase; Θrz: theta ribozyme; pol: polymerase.

[1] L. Sharmeen, M.Y. Kuo, G. Dinter-Gottlieb, J. Taylor, Journal of virology 1988, 62, 2674-2679.
[2] N.J. Riccitelli, E. Delwart, A. Lupták, Biochemistry 2014, 53, 1616-1626.