Although the hammerhead reaction proceeds most
efficiently in divalent cations, cleavage in 4 M LiCl is
only ∼10-fold slower than under standard conditions
of 10 mM MgCl2 (Murray et al., Chem Biol,
1998, 5:587–595; Curtis & Bartel, RNA,
2001, this issue, pp. 546–552). To determine if the
catalytic mechanism with high concentrations of monovalent
cations is similar to that with divalent cations, we compared
the activities of a series of modified hammerhead ribozymes
in the two ionic conditions. Nearly all of the modifications
have similar deleterious effects under both reaction conditions,
suggesting that the hammerhead adopts the same general
catalytic structure with both monovalent and divalent cations.
However, modification of three ligands previously implicated
in the binding of a functional divalent metal ion have
substantially smaller effects on the cleavage rate in Li+
than in Mg2+. This result suggests that an interaction
analogous to the interaction made by this divalent metal
ion is absent in the monovalent reaction. Although the
contribution of this divalent metal ion to the overall
reaction rate is relatively modest, its presence is needed
to achieve the full catalytic rate. The role of this ion
appears to be in facilitating formation of the active structure,
and any direct chemical role of metal ions in hammerhead
catalysis is small.