Title of article
The Influence of Monovalent Cation Size on the Stability of RNA Tertiary Structures
Author/Authors
Dominic Lambert، نويسنده , , Desirae Leipply، نويسنده , , Ross Shiman، نويسنده , , David E. Draper، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
14
From page
791
To page
804
Abstract
Many RNA tertiary structures are stable in the presence of monovalent ions alone. To evaluate the degree to which ions at or near the surfaces of such RNAs contribute to stability, the salt-dependent stability of a variety of RNA structures was measured with each of the five group I cations. The stability of hairpin secondary structures and a pseudoknot tertiary structure are insensitive to the ion identity, but the tertiary structures of two other RNAs, an adenine riboswitch and a kissing loop complex, become more stable by 2–3 kcal/mol as ion size decreases. This "default" trend is attributed to the ability of smaller ions to approach the RNA surface more closely. The degree of cation accumulation around the kissing loop complex was also inversely proportional to ion radius, perhaps because of the presence of sterically restricted pockets that can be accessed only by smaller ions. An RNA containing the tetraloop-receptor motif shows a strong (up to ∼ 3 kcal/mol) preference for Na+ or K+ over other group I ions, consistent with the chelation of K+ by this motif in some crystal structures. This RNA reverts to the default dependence on ion size when a base forming part of the chelation site is mutated. Lastly, an RNA aptamer for cobinamide, which was originally selected in the presence of high concentrations of LiCl, binds ligand more strongly in the presence of Li+ than other monovalent ions.
Keywords
pseudoknot , salt dependence , Riboswitch , kissing loop , tetraloop receptor
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number
1258370
Link To Document