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Molecular crowding overcomes the destabilizing effects of mutations in a bacterial ribozyme
Authors:Hui-Ting Lee  Duncan Kilburn  Reza Behrouzi  Robert M Briber  Sarah A Woodson
Institution:1.Thomas C. Jenkins Department of Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA;2.Center for Neutron Scattering Research, National Institute of Standards and Technology, 100 Bureau Dr., Gaithersburg, MD 20899, USA;3.Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
Abstract:The native structure of the Azoarcus group I ribozyme is stabilized by the cooperative formation of tertiary interactions between double helical domains. Thus, even single mutations that break this network of tertiary interactions reduce ribozyme activity in physiological Mg2+ concentrations. Here, we report that molecular crowding comparable to that in the cell compensates for destabilizing mutations in the Azoarcus ribozyme. Small angle X-ray scattering, native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and activity assays were used to compare folding free energies in dilute and crowded solutions containing 18% PEG1000. Crowder molecules allowed the wild-type and mutant ribozymes to fold at similarly low Mg2+ concentrations and stabilized the active structure of the mutant ribozymes under physiological conditions. This compensation helps explains why ribozyme mutations are often less deleterious in the cell than in the test tube. Nevertheless, crowding did not rescue the high fraction of folded but less active structures formed by double and triple mutants. We conclude that crowding broadens the fitness landscape by stabilizing compact RNA structures without improving the specificity of self-assembly.
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