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1.
Terminal loops containing four nucleotides (tetraloops) are common in structural RNAs, and they frequently conform to one of three sequence motifs, GNRA, UNCG, or CUUG. Here we compare available sequences and secondary structures for rRNAs from bacteria, and we show that helices capped by phylogenetically conserved GNRA loops display a strong tendency to be of conserved length. The simplest interpretation of this correlation is that the conserved GNRA loops are involved in higher-order interactions, intramolecular or intermolecular, resulting in a selective pressure for maintaining the lengths of these helices. A small number of conserved UNCG loops were also found to be associated with conserved length helices, consistent with the possibility that this type of tetraloop also takes part in higher-order interactions.  相似文献   

2.
Zhao Q  Huang HC  Nagaswamy U  Xia Y  Gao X  Fox GE 《Biopolymers》2012,97(8):617-628
The structures of four small RNAs each containing a different version of the UNAC loop were determined in solution using NMR spectroscopy and restrained molecular dynamics. The UMAC tetraloops (where M is A or C) exhibited a typical GNRA fold including at least one hydrogen bond between the first U and fourth C. In contrast, UGAC and UUAC tetraloops have a different orientation of the first and fourth residues, such that they do not closely mimic the GNRA fold. Although the UMAC tetraloops are excellent structural mimics of the GNRA tetraloop backbone, sequence comparisons typically do not reveal co‐variation between the two loop types. The limited covariation is attributed to differences in the location of potential hydrogen bond donors and acceptors as a result of the replacement of the terminal A of GNRA with C in the UMAC version. Thus, UMAC loops do not readily form the common GNRA tetraloop‐receptor interaction. The loop at positions 863‐866 in E. coli 16S ribosomal RNA appears to be a major exception. However, in this case the GNRA loop does not in fact engage in the usual base to backbone tertiary interactions. In summary, UMAC loops are not just an alternative sequence version of the GNRA loop family, but instead they expand the types of interactions, or lack thereof, that are possible. From a synthetic biology perspective their inclusion in an artificial RNA may allow the establishment of a stable loop structure while minimizing unwanted long range interactions or permitting alternative long‐range interactions. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 97: 617–628, 2012.  相似文献   

3.
Tetraloops are a common building block for RNA tertiary structure, and most tetraloops fall into one of three well-characterized classes: GNRA, UNCG, and CUYG. Here, we present the sequence and structure of a fourth highly conserved class of tetraloop that occurs only within the ζ-ζ′ interaction of group IIC introns. This GANC tetraloop was identified, along with an unusual cognate receptor, in the crystal structure of the group IIC intron and through phylogenetic analysis of intron RNA sequence alignments. Unlike conventional tetraloop-receptor interactions, which are stabilized by extensive hydrogen-bonding interactions, the GANC-receptor interaction is limited to a single base stack between the conserved adenosine of the tetraloop and a single purine of the receptor, which consists of a one- to three-nucleotide bulge and does not contain an A-platform. Unlike GNRA tetraloops, the GANC tetraloop forms a sharp angle relative to the adjacent helix, bending by approximately 45° toward the major groove side of the helix. These structural attributes allow GANC tetraloops to fit precisely within the group IIC intron core, thereby demonstrating that structural motifs can adapt to function in a specific niche.  相似文献   

4.
GNRA tetraloops (N is A, C, G, or U; R is A or G) are basic building blocks of RNA structure that often interact with proteins or other RNA structural elements. Understanding sequence-dependent structural variation among different GNRA tetraloops is an important step toward elucidating the molecular basis of specific GNRA tetraloop recognition by proteins and RNAs. Details of the geometry and hydration of this motif have been based on high-resolution crystallographic structures of the GRRA subset of tetraloops; less is known about the GYRA subset (Y is C or U). We report here the structure of a GUAA tetraloop determined to 1.4 A resolution to better define these details and any distinctive features of GYRA tetraloops. The tetraloop is part of a 27-nt structure that mimics the universal sarcin/ricin loop from Escherichia coli 23S ribosomal RNA in which a GUAA tetraloop replaces the conserved GAGA tetraloop. The adenosines of the GUAA tetraloop form an intermolecular contact that is a commonplace RNA tertiary interaction called an A-minor motif. This is the first structure to reveal in great detail the geometry and hydration of a GUAA tetraloop and an A-minor motif. Comparison of tetraloop structures shows a common backbone geometry for each of the eight possible tetraloop sequences and suggests a common hydration. After backbone atom superposition, equivalent bases from different tetraloops unexpectedly depart from coplanarity by as much as 48 degrees. This variation displaces the functional groups of tetraloops implicated in protein and RNA binding, providing a recognition feature.  相似文献   

5.
Release 2.0.1 of the Structural Classification of RNA (SCOR) database, http://scor.lbl.gov, contains a classification of the internal and hairpin loops in a comprehensive collection of 497 NMR and X-ray RNA structures. This report discusses findings of the classification that have not been reported previously. The SCOR database contains multiple examples of a newly described RNA motif, the extruded helical single strand. Internal loop base triples are classified in SCOR according to their three-dimensional context. These internal loop triples contain several examples of a frequently found motif, the minor groove AGC triple. SCOR also presents the predominant and alternate conformations of hairpin loops, as shown in the most well represented tetraloops, with consensus sequences GNRA, UNCG and ANYA. The ubiquity of the GNRA hairpin turn motif is illustrated by its presence in complex internal loops.  相似文献   

6.
A thermodynamic study of unusually stable RNA and DNA hairpins.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
V P Antao  S Y Lai    I Tinoco  Jr 《Nucleic acids research》1991,19(21):5901-5905
About 70% of the RNA tetra-loop sequences identified in ribosomal RNAs from different organisms fall into either (UNCG) or (GNRA) families (where N = A, C, G, or U; and R = A or G). RNA hairpins with these loop sequences form unusually stable tetra-loop structures. We have studied the RNA hairpin GGAC(UUCG)GUCC and several sequence variants to determine the effect of changing the loop sequence and the loop-closing base pair on the thermodynamic stability of (UNCG) tetra-loops. The hairpin GGAG(CUUG)CUCC with the conserved loop G(CUUG)C was also unusually stable. We have determined melting temperatures (Tm), and obtained thermodynamic parameters for DNA hairpins with sequences analogous to stable RNA hairpins with (UNCG), C(GNRA)G, C(GAUA)G, and G(CUUG)C loops. DNA hairpins with (TTCG), (dUdUCG), and related sequences in the loop, unlike their RNA counterparts, did not form unusually stable hairpins. However, DNA hairpins with the consensus loop sequence C(GNRA)G were very stable compared to hairpins with C(TTTT)G or C(AAAA)G loops. The C(GATA)G and G(CTTG)C loops were also extra stable. The relative stabilities of the unusually stable DNA hairpins are similar to those observed for their RNA analogs.  相似文献   

7.
Little is known about the tertiary structure of internal ribosome entry site (IRES) elements. The central domain of foot-and-mouth disease (FMDV) IRES, named 3 or I, contains a conserved GNRA motif, essential for IRES activity. We have combined functional analysis with RNA probing to define its structural organization. We have found that a UNCG motif does not functionally substitute the GNRA motif; moreover, binding of synthetic GNRA stem-loops to domain 3 was significantly reduced in RNAs bearing UCCG or GUAG substitutions. The apical region of domain 3 consists of a four-way junction where residues of the GNRA tetraloop are responsible for the organization of the adjacent stem-loops, as deduced from ribonucleases and dimethyl sulfate accessibility. A single A-to-G substitution in the fourth position of this motif led to a strong RNA reorganization, affecting several nucleotides away in the secondary structure of domain 3. The study of mutants bearing UNCG or GUAG tetraloops revealed lack of protection to chemical attack in native RNA at specific nucleotides relative to the parental GUAA, suggesting that the GNRA motif dictates the organization and stability of domain 3. This effect is likely mediated by the interaction with distant residues. Therefore, the GNRA motif plays a crucial role in the organization of IRES structure with important consequences on activity.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate the accuracy of a model [Giese et al., 1998, Biochemistry37:1094-1100 and Mathews et al., 1999, JMol Biol 288:911-940] that predicts the stability of RNA hairpin loops, optical melting studies were conducted on sets of hairpins previously determined to have unusually stable thermodynamic parameters. Included were the tetraloops GNRA and UNCG (where N is any nucleotide and R is a purine), hexaloops with UU first mismatches, and the hairpin loop of the iron responsive element, CAGUGC. The experimental values for the GNRA loops are in excellent agreement (deltaG degrees 37 within 0.2 kcal/mol and melting temperature (TM) within 4 degrees C) with the values predicted by the model. When the UNCG hairpin loops are treated as tetraloops, and a bonus of 0.8 kcal/mol included in the prediction to account for the extra stable first mismatch (UG), the measured and predicted values are also in good agreement (deltaG degrees 37 within 0.7 kcal/mol and TM within 3 degrees C). Six hairpins with unusually stable UU first mismatches also gave good agreement with the predictions (deltaG degrees 37 within 0.5 kcal/mol and TM within 8 degrees C), except for hairpins closed by wobble base pairs. For these hairpins, exclusion of the additional stabilization term for UU first mismatches improved the prediction (AG degrees 37 within 0.1 kcal/mol and TM within 3 degrees C). Hairpins with the iron-responsive element loop were not predicted well by the model, as measured deltaG degrees 37 values were at least 1 kcal/mol greater than predicted.  相似文献   

9.
Control of Rous sarcoma virus RNA splicing depends in part on the interaction of U1 and U11 snRNPs with an intronic RNA element called the negative regulator of splicing (NRS). A 23mer RNA hairpin (NRS23) of the NRS directly binds U1 and U11 snRNPs. Mutations that disrupt base-pairing between the loop of NRS23 and U1 snRNA abolish its negative control of splicing. We have determined the solution structure of NRS23 using NOEs, torsion angles, and residual dipolar couplings that were extracted from multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectra. Our structure showed that the 6-bp stem of NRS23 adopts a nearly A-form duplex conformation. The loop, which consists of 11 residues according to secondary structure probing, was in a closed conformation. U913, the first residue in the loop, was bulged out or dynamic, and loop residues G914-C923, G915-U922, and U916-A921 were base-paired. The remaining UUGU tetraloop sequence did not adopt a stable structure and appears flexible in solution. This tetraloop differs from the well-known classes of tetraloops (GNRA, CUYG, UNCG) in terms of its stability, structure, and function. Deletion of the bulged U913, which is not complementary to U1 snRNA, increased the melting temperature of the RNA hairpin. This hyperstable hairpin exhibited a significant decrease in binding to U1 snRNP. Thus, the structure of the NRS RNA, as well as its sequence, is important for interaction with U1 snRNP and for splicing suppression.  相似文献   

10.
High resolution NMR data on UNCG and GNRA tetraloops (where N is any of the four nucleotides and R is a purine) have shown that they contain ribonucleosides with unusual 2'-endo/anti and 3'-endo/syn conformations, in addition to the 3'-endo/anti ones which are regularly encountered in RNA chains. In the current study, Raman spectroscopy has been used to probe these nucleoside conformations and follow the order (hairpin) to disorder (random chain) structural transitions in aqueous phase in the 5-80 degreesC temperature range. Spectral evolution of GCAA and GAAA tetraloops, as formed in very short hairpins with only three G.C base pairs in their stems (T m >60 degreesC), are reported and compared with those previously published on UUCG and UACG tetraloops, for which the syn orientation of the terminal guanine as well as the 2'-endo/anti conformation of the third rC residue have been confirmed by means of vibrational marker bands. Raman data obtained as a function of temperature show that the first uracil in the UUCG tetraloop is stacked and the two middle residues (rU and rC) are in the 2'-endo/anti conformation, in agreement with the previously published NMR results. As far as the new data concerning the GNRA type tetraloops are concerned, they lead us to conclude that: (i) in both cases (GCAA and GAAA tetraloops) the adenine bases are stacked; (ii) the second rC residue in the GCAA tetraloop has a 3'-endo/anti conformation; (iii) the sugar pucker associated with the third rA residue in both tetraloops possibly undergoes a 3'-endo/2'-endo interconversion as predicted by NMR results; (iv) the stem adopts a regular A-form structure; (v) all other nucleosides of these two GNRA tetraloops possess the usual 3'-endo/anti conformation.  相似文献   

11.
RNA is known to fold into a variety of structural elements, many of which have sufficient sequence complexity to make the thermodynamic study of each possible variant impractical. We previously reported a method for isolating stable and unstable RNA sequences from combinatorial libraries using temperature gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE). This method was used herein to analyze a six-nucleotide RNA hairpin loop library. Three rounds of in vitro selection were performed using TGGE, and unusually stable RNAs were identified by cloning and sequencing. Known stable tetraloops were found, including sequences belonging to the UNCG motif closed by a CG base pair, and the CUUG motif closed by a GC base pair. In addition, unknown tetraloops were found that were nearly as stable as cUNCGg, including sequences related through substitution of the U with a C (Y), the C with an A (M), or both. These substitutions allow hydrogen bonding and stacking interactions in the UNCG loop to be maintained. Thermodynamic analysis of YNMG and variant loops confirmed optimal stability with Y at position 1 and M at position 3. Similarity in structure and stability among YNMG loops was further supported by deoxyribose substitution, CD, and NMR experiments. A conserved tertiary interaction in 16S rRNA exists between a YAMG loop at position 343 and two adenines in the loop at position 159 (Escherichia coli numbering). NMR and functional group substitution experiments suggest that YNAG loops in particular have enhanced flexibility, which allows the tertiary interaction to be maintained with diverse loop sequences at position 159. Taken together, these results support the existence of an extended family of UNCG-like tetraloops with the motif cYNMGg that are thermodynamically stable and structurally similar and can engage in tertiary interactions in large RNA molecules.  相似文献   

12.
RNA structural motifs are the building blocks of the complex RNA architecture. Identification of non-coding RNA structural motifs is a critical step towards understanding of their structures and functionalities. In this article, we present a clustering approach for de novo RNA structural motif identification. We applied our approach on a data set containing 5S, 16S and 23S rRNAs and rediscovered many known motifs including GNRA tetraloop, kink-turn, C-loop, sarcin-ricin, reverse kink-turn, hook-turn, E-loop and tandem-sheared motifs, with higher accuracy than the state-of-the-art clustering method. We also identified a number of potential novel instances of GNRA tetraloop, kink-turn, sarcin-ricin and tandem-sheared motifs. More importantly, several novel structural motif families have been revealed by our clustering analysis. We identified a highly asymmetric bulge loop motif that resembles the rope sling. We also found an internal loop motif that can significantly increase the twist of the helix. Finally, we discovered a subfamily of hexaloop motif, which has significantly different geometry comparing to the currently known hexaloop motif. Our discoveries presented in this article have largely increased current knowledge of RNA structural motifs.  相似文献   

13.
Osmolytes have the potential to affect the stability of secondary structure motifs and alter preferences for conserved nucleic acid sequences in the cell. To contribute to the understanding of the in vivo function of RNA we observed the effects of different classes of osmolytes on the UNCG tetraloop motif. UNCG tetraloops are the most common and stable of the RNA tetraloops and are nucleation sites for RNA folding. They also have a significant thermodynamic preference for a CG closing base pair. The thermal denaturation of model hairpins containing UUCG loops was monitored using UV-Vis spectroscopy in the presence of osmolytes with different chemical properties. Interestingly, all of the osmolytes tested destabilized the hairpins, but all had little effect on the thermodynamic preference for a CG base pair, except for polyethylene glycol (PEG) 200. PEG 200 destabilized the loop with the CG closing base pair relative to the loop with a GC closing base pair. The destabilization was linear with increasing concentrations of PEG 200, and the slope of this relationship was not perturbed by changes in the hairpin stem outside of the closing pair. This result suggests that in the presence of PEG 200, the UUCG loop with a GC closing base pair may retain some preferential interactions with the cosolute that are lost in the presence of the CG closing base pair. These results reveal that relatively small structural changes may influence how osmolytes tune the stability, and thus the function of a secondary structure motif in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
Specific recognitions of GNRA tetraloops by small helical receptors are among the most widespread long-range packing interactions in large ribozymes. However, in contrast to GYRA and GAAA tetraloops, very few GNRA/receptor interactions have yet been identified to involve GGAA tetraloops in nature. A novel in vitro selection scheme based on a rigid self-assembling tectoRNA scaffold designed for isolation of intermolecular interactions with A-minor motifs has yielded new GGAA tetraloop-binding receptors with affinity in the nanomolar range. One of the selected receptors is a novel 12 nt RNA motif, (CCUGUG ... AUCUGG), that recognizes GGAA tetraloop hairpin with a remarkable specificity and affinity. Its physical and chemical characteristics are comparable to those of the well-studied '11nt' GAAA tetraloop receptor motif. A second less specific motif (CCCAGCCC ... GAUAGGG) binds GGRA tetraloops and appears to be related to group IC3 tetraloop receptors. Mutational, thermodynamic and comparative structural analysis suggests that natural and in vitro selected GNRA receptors can essentially be grouped in two major classes of GNRA binders. New insights about the evolution, recognition and structural modularity of GNRA and A-minor RNA-RNA interactions are proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Conformational equilibrium within the ubiquitous GNRA tetraloop motif was simulated at the ensemble level, including 10 000 independent all-atom molecular dynamics trajectories totaling over 110 µs of simulation time. This robust sampling reveals a highly dynamic structure comprised of 15 conformational microstates. We assemble a Markov model that includes transitions ranging from the nanosecond to microsecond timescales and is dominated by six key loop conformations that contribute to fluctuations around the native state. Mining of the Protein Data Bank provides an abundance of structures in which GNRA tetraloops participate in tertiary contact formation. Most predominantly observed in the experimental data are interactions of the native loop structure within the minor groove of adjacent helical regions. Additionally, a second trend is observed in which the tetraloop assumes non-native conformations while participating in multiple tertiary contacts, in some cases involving multiple possible loop conformations. This tetraloop flexibility can act to counterbalance the energetic penalty associated with assuming non-native loop structures in forming tertiary contacts. The GNRA motif has thus evolved not only to readily participate in simple tertiary interactions involving native loop structure, but also to easily adapt tetraloop secondary conformation in order to participate in larger, more complex tertiary interactions.  相似文献   

16.
Assembly of the human signal recognition particle (SRP) requires SRP19 protein to bind to helices 6 and 8 of SRP RNA. In the present study, structure of a 29-mer RNA composing the SRP19 binding site in helix 6 was determined by NMR spectroscopy. The two A:C mismatches were continuously stacked to each other and formed wobble type A:C base pairs. The GGAG tetraloop in helix 6 was found to adopt a similar conformation to that of GNRA tetraloop, suggesting that these tetraloops are included in an extensive new motif GNRR. Compared with the crystal structure of helix 6 in complex with SRP19 determined previously, the GGAG tetraloop in the complex was found to adopt a similar conformation to the free form, although the loop structure becomes more open upon SRP19 binding. Thus, SRP19 is thought to recognize the overall fold of the GGAG loop.  相似文献   

17.
Although artificial RNA motifs that can functionally replace the GNRA/receptor interaction, a class of RNA–RNA interacting motifs, were isolated from RNA libraries and used to generate designer RNA structures, receptors for non-GNRA tetraloops have not been found in nature or selected from RNA libraries. In this study, we report successful isolation of a receptor motif interacting with GAAC, a non-GNRA tetraloop, from randomized sequences embedded in a catalytic RNA. Biochemical characterization of the GAAC/receptor interacting motif within three structural contexts showed its binding affinity, selectivity and structural autonomy. The motif has binding affinity comparable with that of a GNRA/receptor, selectivity orthogonal to GNRA/receptors and structural autonomy even in a large RNA context. These features would be advantageous for usage of the motif as a building block for designer RNAs. The isolated motif can also be used as a query sequence to search for unidentified naturally occurring GANC receptor motifs.  相似文献   

18.
Terminal tetraloops consisting of GNRA sequences are often found in biologically active large RNAs. The loops appear to contribute towards the organization of higher order RNA structures by forming specific tertiary interactions with their receptors. Group IC3 introns which possess a GAAA loop in the L2 region often have a phylogenetically conserved motif in their P8 domains. In this report, we show that this conserved motif stands as a new class of receptor that distinguishes the sequences of GNRA loops less stringently than previously known receptors. The motif can functionally substitute an 11 nt motif receptor in the Tetrahymena ribozyme. Its structural and functional similarity to one class of synthetic receptors obtained from in vitro selection is observed.  相似文献   

19.
以UNCG、GNRA、CUUG(N=A、U、C或G,R=G或A)为端环能够形成稳定的、保守的发夹结构。高分辨率的溶液结构、晶体结构和计算机模拟等方法从原子水平上解析了这些发夹特殊的结构特征。在体内,它们发挥着重要的生物学功能:在折叠过程中作为折叠的起始位置帮助组织RNA分子正确折叠;与核酸受体结合参与三级相互作用;与蛋白质发生相互作用;阻止逆转录酶的延伸等等。另外,由于C(UUCG)G发夹极其稳定的特征,在体外RNA分子的实验测定中它还是稳定核酸结构的理想工具。这些稳定的发夹广泛分布于体内rRNA、催化RNA和非编码mRNA中。但在对人类编码区mRNA结构特征的研究当中,却未发现C(UUCG)G发夹。  相似文献   

20.
GNRA tetraloops, found in high frequency in natural RNAs, make loop-receptor interactions, stabilizing the tertiary structure of Group I introns, a class of small RNAs. Analyzing 230 Group I introns, to study the distribution and sequence pattern of the GNRA tetraloops, we suggest that these features reflect the ancestral nature of these catalytic molecules, in a prebiotic RNA world. The adenosine rich GNRA tetraloops would have interacted with each other through long range RNA-RNA interactions to form higher order structures forming potential sites that render the propensity for the short RNAs to bind to metal ions from the prebiotic pool, aiding them to act as metalloenzymes.  相似文献   

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