Browsing by Subject "RNA structure"
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Item Open Access M6A Reshapes the Folding and Recognition Landscape of RNAs(2021) Liu, BeiRibonucleic acid (RNA) is a versatile and dynamic biomolecule that serves as an indispensable component in the central dogma of molecular biology. The realization that RNA plays a wide variety of roles in gene expression and regulation has been accompanied by the discovery that virtually all types of RNA are chemically modified. These modifications have profound effects on RNA metabolism. N6-Methyladenosine (m6A) is an abundant post-transcriptional RNA modification that influences multiple aspects of gene expression. While m6A is thought to mainly function by recruiting reader proteins to specific RNA sites, the modification can also reshape RNA-protein and RNA−RNA interactions by altering RNA structure mainly by destabilizing base pairing. Here we sought to provide a broad and deep description of how m6A reshapes the folding and recognition landscape of RNA, which provides detailed mechanisms via which m6A exerts its biological functions.First, we show that when neighbored by a 5ʹ bulge, m6A stabilizes m6A–U base pairs and global RNA structure by ~1 kcal/mol. The bulge most likely provides the flexibility needed to allow optimal stacking between the methyl group and 3ʹ neighbor through a conformation that is stabilized by Mg2+. A bias toward this motif can help explain the global impact of methylation on RNA structure in transcriptome-wide studies. While m6A embedded in duplex RNA is poorly recognized by the YTH domain reader protein and m6A antibodies, both readily recognize m6A in this newly identified motif. The results uncover potentially abundant and functional m6A motifs that can modulate the epitranscriptomic structure landscape with important implications for the interpretation of transcriptome-wide data. In addition to altering RNA stability, m6A has also been shown to slow the kinetics of biochemical processes involving RNA-RNA interactions. However, little is known about how m6A affects the kinetic rates of RNA folding and conformational transitions that are important for RNA functions. We developed an NMR relaxation dispersion (RD) method to non-invasively and site-specifically measure nucleic acid hybridization kinetics. Using this method, we discovered that m6A selectively slows annealing rate while has minimal impact on melting rate in different sequence contexts and buffer conditions. To understand the mechanism of the m6A-induced slowdown of hybridization, we used NMR RD to dissect the kinetic pathways of duplex hybridization. We show that m6A pairs with uridine with the methylamino group in the anti conformation to form a Watson-Crick base pair that transiently exchanges on the millisecond timescale with a singly hydrogen-bonded low-populated (1%) mismatch-like conformation in which the methylamino group is syn. This ability to rapidly interchange between Watson-Crick or mismatch-like forms, combined with different syn:anti isomer preferences when paired (~1:100) versus unpaired (~10:1), explains how m6A robustly slows duplex annealing without affecting melting via two pathways in which isomerization occurs before or after duplex annealing. Our model quantitatively predicts how m6A reshapes the kinetic landscape of nucleic acid hybridization and conformational transitions and provides an explanation for why the modification robustly slows diverse cellular processes. Taken together, these results uncover the important role of m6A on modulating RNA-RNA and RNA-protein interactions through altering RNA structure and dynamics, highlighting the structural-dynamics-function relationship.
Item Open Access RNA Backbone Rotamers and Chiropraxis(2007-07-25) Murray, Laura WestonRNA backbone is biologically important with many roles in reactions and interactions, but has historically been a challenge in structural determination. It has many atoms and torsions to place, and often there is less data on it than one might wish. This problem leads to both random and systematic error, producing noise in an already high-dimensional and complex distribution to further complicate data-driven analysis. With the advent of the ribosomal subunit structures published in 2000, large RNA structures at good resolution, it became possible to apply the Richardson laboratory's quality-filtering, visualization, and analysis techniques to RNA and develop new tools for RNA as well. A first set of 42 RNA backbone rotamers was identified, developed, and published in 2003; it has since been thoroughly overhauled in conjunction with the backbone group of the RNA Ontology Consortium to combine the strengths of different approaches, incorporate new data, and produce a consensus set of 46 conformers. Meanwhile, extensive work has taken place on developing validation and remodeling tools to correct and improve existing structures as well as to assist in initial fitting. The use of base-phosphate perpendicular distances to identify sugar pucker has proven very useful in both hand-refitting and the semi-automated process of using RNABC (RNA Backbone Correction), a program developed in conjunction with Dr. Jack Snoeyink's laboratory. The guanine riboswitch structure ur0039/1U8D, by Dr. Rob Batey's laboratory, has been collaboratively refit and rerefined as a successful test case of the utility of these tools and techniques. Their testing and development will continue, and they are expected to help to improve RNA structure determination in both ease and quality.