The hammerhead ribozyme from Schistosoma mansoni is the best characterized of the natural hammerhead ribozymes. Biophysical, biochemical, and structural studies have shown that the formation of the loop-loop tertiary interaction between stems I and II alters the global folding, cleavage kinetics, and conformation of the catalytic core of this hammerhead, leading to a ribozyme that is readily cleaved under physiological conditions. This study investigates the ligation kinetics and the internal equilibrium between cleavage and ligation for the Schistosoma hammerhead. Single turnover kinetic studies on a construct where the ribozyme cleaves and ligates substrate(s) in trans showed up to 23% ligation when starting from fully cleaved products. This was achieved by a ~2,000-fold increase in the rate of ligation compared to a minimal hammerhead without the loop-loop tertiary interaction, yielding an internal equilibrium that ranges from 2-3 at physiological Mg 2+ ion concentrations (0.1 -1 mM). Thus, the natural Schistosoma hammerhead ribozyme is almost as efficient at ligation as it is at cleavage. The results here are consistent with a model where formation of the loop-loop tertiary interaction leads to a higher population of catalytically active molecules, and where formation of this tertiary interaction has a much larger effect on the ligation than the cleavage activity of the Schistosoma hammerhead ribozyme.Ribozymes are the catalytic molecules that take part in a variety of biochemical reactions including peptidyl transfer (1, 2), self-splicing (3-5), tRNA maturation (6, 7), regulation of translation in Gram-positive bacteria (8), and processing of replication intermediates in plant pathogenic RNAs such as viroids and satellite RNAs of viruses (9-11). These plant pathogenic RNAs replicate via a rolling circle mechanism where hammerhead and hairpin ribozymes self-cleave the long multi-genomic RNA strand into single genomes (11)(12)(13)(14)(15). These linear single genomes must be subsequently re-circularized to continue the replication cycle. The hammerhead ribozyme has been proposed to also function as the RNA ligase where it reacts in cis on a linear RNA to give the circular genome (11,(16)(17)(18). Other possibilities for the in vivo ligation reaction are that the ribozyme requires the assistance of a host protein (19) or that a host protein performs the ligation reaction (20)(21)(22).The hammerhead ribozyme belongs to the group of small catalytic RNAs that includes the hairpin, VS 1 , and HDV ribozymes (23). These ribozymes catalyze the same cleavage reaction where nucleophilic attack of the 2'-OH at the cleavage site phosphate leads to products containing a 2', 3'-cyclic phosphate and a 5 24). The minimal † This work was supported in part by grants from: NIH (AI 30726) and the W. M. Keck Foundation initiative in RNA science at the University of Colorado, Boulder * To whom correspondence should be addressed. arthur.pardi@colorado.edu, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, 215 UCB, University of Col...