Understanding how self-cleaving ribozymes mediate catalysis is crucial in light of compelling evidence that human and bacterial gene expression can be regulated through RNA self-cleavage. The hairpin ribozyme catalyzes reversible phosphodiester bond cleavage through a mechanism that does not require divalent metal cations. Previous structural and biochemical evidence implicated the amidine group of an active site adenosine, A38, in a pH-dependent step in catalysis. We developed a way to determine microscopic pK a values in active ribozymes based on the pH-dependent fluorescence of 8-azaadenosine (8azaA). We compared the microscopic pK a for ionization of 8azaA at position 38 with the apparent pK a for the self-cleavage reaction in a fully functional hairpin ribozyme with a unique 8azaA at position 38. Microscopic and apparent pK a values were virtually the same, evidence that A38 protonation accounts for the decrease in catalytic activity with decreasing pH. These results implicate the neutral unprotonated form of A38 in a transition state that involves formation of the 5-oxygen-phosphorus bond.Hairpin ribozymes (Hp Rz) 2 belong to one of several families of small self-cleaving RNAs that serve as useful models of RNA catalysis because they are relatively simple and amenable to chemogenetic analyses (1). The Hp Rz remains functional in the absence of divalent metals, relying exclusively on nucleotide functional groups for catalytic chemistry (2-5). High resolution structures of the Hp Rz bound to transition state mimics show two active site purines, G8 and A38, positioned in a manner similar to the two histidines in RNase A that mediate general acid-base catalysis of the same reaction ( Fig. 1A) (6 -8), leading to the proposal that the Hp Rz uses the same concerted general acid-base mechanism (Fig. 1B) (9). A38(N1) is near the 5Ј-oxygen of the reactive phosphodiester, and A38(N6) lies within hydrogen bonding distance of the pro-R P non-bridging oxygen. Exogenous nucleobase rescue experiments confirmed that the amidine group of A38 interacts with the transition state, but its precise role remained unclear (10). In a general acid-base model, the cationic protonated form of A38 would act as a general acid during cleavage to donate a proton to the 5Ј-oxygen leaving group as the 5Ј-oxygen-phosphorus bond breaks. During the reverse ligation reaction, unprotonated A38 would accept a proton to activate the nucleophilic 5Ј-oxygen for attack on phosphorus as the 5Ј-oxygen-phosphorus bond forms. Cleavage and ligation rate constants both increase with increasing pH and exhibit the same apparent pK a values near 6.5 (3), consistent with the law of microscopic reversibility (11). The pH dependence of reaction kinetics can provide information about the identity of general acid-base catalyst when an apparent pK a value clearly corresponds to the microscopic pK a value for a particular active site functional group. However, no RNA functional groups exhibit protonation equilibria near pH 6.5, at least as free nucleotides in solu...