Beigelman et al., “Chemical Modification of Hammerhead Ribozymes,” J. Biol. Chem. 270:25702-25708 (1995). |
Burgin et al., “Chemically Modified Hammerhead Ribozymes with Improved Catalytic Rates,” Biochemistry 35:14090-14097 (1996) (volume no mistakenly listed as 6). |
Burke et al., “Structural Analysis and Modifications of the Hairpin Ribozyme,” Nucleic Acids and Modecular Biology, edited by Eckstein and Lilley, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 10:129-143 (1996). |
Cech et al., “Representation of the secondary and tertiary structure of group I introns,” nature structural biology 1:273-280 (1994). |
Cech, “Ribozymes and Their Medical Implications,” JAMA 260:3030-3034 (1988). |
Christoffersen and Marr, “Riobozymes as Human Therapeutic Agents,” J. Med. Chem. 38:2023-2037 (1995). |
Collins and Olive, “Reaction Conditions and Kinetics of Self-Cleavage of a Ribozyme Derived From Neurospora VS RNA,” Biochemistry 32:2795-2799 (1993). |
Forster and Altman, “External Guide Sequences for an RNA Enzyme,” Science 249-783-786 (1990). |
Gasparutto et al., “Chemical synthesis of a biologically active natural tRNA with its minor bases,” Nucleic Acids Research 20(19):5159-5166 (1992). |
Guerrier-Takada et al., “The RNA Moiety of Ribonuclease P Is the Catalytic Subunit of the Enzyme,” Cell 35:849-857 (1983). |
Guo and Collins, “Efficent trans-cleavage of a stem-loop RNA substrate by a ribozyme derived from Neurospora VS RNA,” EMBO J. 14:368-376 (1995). |
Hampel and Tritz, “RNA Catalytic Properties of the Minimum (-)sTRSV Sequence,” Biochemistry 28:4929-4933 (1989). |
Hampel et al., “‘Hairpin’ Catalytic RNA Model: Evidence for Helices and Sequence Requirement for Substrate RNA,” Nucleic Acids Research 18:299-304 (1990). |
Haseloff and Gerlach, “Simple RNA Enzymes with New and Highly Specific Endoribonuclease Activities,” Nature 334:585-591 (1988). |
Hogrefe et al., “Effect of excess water on the desilylation of oligoribonucleotides using tetrabutylammonium fluoride,” Nucleic Acids Research 21:4739-4741 (1993). |
Jeffries and Symons, “A Catalytic 13-mer Ribozyme,” Nucleic Acids Research 17:1371-1377 (1989). |
Kim and Cech, “Three-dimensional model of the active site of the self-splicing rRNA precursor of Tetrahymena,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:8788-8792 (1987). |
Limbach et al., “Summary: the modified nucleosides of RNA,” Nucleic Acids Research 22(12):2183-2196 (1994). |
Pace and Smith, “Ribonuclease P: Function and Variation,” J. Biol. Chem. 265:3587-3590 (1990). |
Perreault et al., “Mixed Deoxyribo- and Ribo-Oligonucleotides with Catalytic Activity,” Nature 344:565-567 (1990). |
Perreault et al., “Relationship between 2′-Hydroxyls and Magensium Binding in the Hammerhead RNA Domain: A Model for Ribozyme Catalysis,” Biochemistry 30:4020-4025 (1991). |
Perrotta and Been, “Cleavage of Oligoribonucleotides by a Ribozyme Derived from the Hepatitis δ Virus RNA Sequence,” Biochemistry 31:16-21 (1992). |
Pieken et al., “Kinetic Characterization of Ribonuclease-Resistant 2′-Modified Hammerhead Ribozymes,” Science 253:314-317 (1991). |
Pyle et al., “Building a Kinetic Framework for Group II Intron Ribozyme Activity: Quantitation of Interdomain Binding and Reaction Rate,” Biochemistry 33:2716-2725 (1994). |
Rossi et al., “Ribozymes as Anti-HIV-1 Therapeutic Agents: Principles, Applications, and Problems,” Aids Research and Human Retroviruses 8:183-189 (1992). |
Saville and Collins, “A Site-Specific Self-Cleavage Reaction Performed by a Novel RNA In Neurospora Mitochondria,” Cell 61:685-696 (1990). |
Saville and Collins, “RNA-Mediated Ligation of Self-Cleavage Products of a Neurospora Mitochondrial Plasmid Transcript,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 88:8826-8830 (1991). |
Scaringe et al., “Chemical synthesis of biologically active oligoribonucleotides using—cyanoethyl protected ribonucleoside phosphoramidites,” Nucl Acids Res. 18:5433-5441 (1990). |
Slim and Gait, “Configurationally Defined Phosphorothioate-Containing Oligoribonucleotides in the Study of the Mechanism of Cleavage of Hammerhead Ribozymes,” Nucleic Acids Research 19:1183-1188 (1991). |
Uhlenbeck, “A Small Catalytic Oligoribonucleotide,” Nature 328:596-600 (1987). |
Usman and Cedergren, “Exploiting the chemical synthesis of RNA,” TIBS 17:334-339 (1992). |
Usman and McSwiggen, “Ch. 30—Catalytic RNA (Ribozymes) as Drugs,” Annual Reports in Medicinal Chemistry 30:285-294 (1995). |
Usman et al., “Automated Chemical Synthesis of Long Oligoribonucleotides Using 2′-O-Silylated Ribonucleoside 3′-O-Phosphoramidites on a Controlled-Pore Glass Support: Synthesis of a 43-Nucleotide Sequence Similar to the 3′-Half Molecule of an Escherichia coli Formylmethoionine tRNA,” J. Am. Chem. Soc. 109:7845-7854 (1987). |
Usman et al., “Chemical modification of hammerhead ribozymes: activity and nuclease resistance,” Nucleic Acids Syposium Series 31:163-164 (1994). |
Usman et al., “Hamerhead ribozyme engineering,” Current Opinion in Structural Biology 1:527-533(1996). |
Vinayak et al., “Advances in the chemical synthesis and purification of RNA,” Nucleic Acids Symposium Series 33:123-125 (1995). |
Wincott et al., “Synthesis, deprotection, analysis and purification of RNA and ribozymes,” Nucleic Acids Research 23:2677-2684 (1995). |
Zaug et al., “The Tetrahymena Ribozyme Acts Like an RNA Restriction Endonuclease,” Nature 324:429-433 (1986). |