Exchange of RNA structural domains through recombination
can be used to engineer RNAs with novel functions and may
have played an important role in the early evolution of
life. The degree of function an RNA element retains upon
recombination into a new sequence context is a measure
of how deleterious or beneficial recombination will be.
When we fused pairs of aptamers previously selected to
bind coenzyme A, chloramphenicol, or adenosine, the chimerae
retained some ability to bind both targets, but with reduced
binding activity both in solution and on affinity resins,
probably due to misfolding. Complex populations of recombined
RNAs gave similar results. Applying dual selection pressure
to recombined populations yielded the combinations that
were best suited to binding both targets. Most reselected
RNAs folded into the active conformation more readily than
chimerae built from arbitrarily chosen aptamers, as indicated
both by solution Kd measurements and
affinity resin binding activity. Deletion/selection experiments
confirmed that the sequences required for binding are fully
contained within the respective domains and not derived
from interaction between the domains, consistent with the
modular architecture of their original design. The combinatorial
nature of the recombination methods presented here takes
advantage of the full sequence diversity of the starting
populations and yields large numbers of bifunctional molecules
(106 to more than 1012). The method
can be easily generalized and should be applicable to engineering
dual-function RNAs for a wide variety of applications,
including catalysis, novel therapeutics, and studies of
long-range RNA structure.