Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Biophys J. 2013 Mar 19;104(6):1326-37. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2013.02.007.
Many RNA molecules exert their biological function only after folding to unique three-dimensional structures. For long, noncoding RNA molecules, the complexity of finding the native topology can be a major impediment to correct folding to the biologically active structure. An RNA molecule may fold to a near-native structure but not be able to continue to the correct structure due to a topological barrier such as crossed strands or incorrectly stacked helices. Achieving the native conformation thus requires unfolding and refolding, resulting in a long-lived intermediate. We investigate the role of topology in the folding of two phylogenetically related catalytic group I introns, the Twort and Azoarcus group I ribozymes. The kinetic models describing the Mg(2+)-mediated folding of these ribozymes were previously determined by time-resolved hydroxyl (∙OH) radical footprinting. Two intermediates formed by parallel intermediates were resolved for each RNA. These data and analytical ultracentrifugation compaction analyses are used herein to constrain coarse-grained models of these folding intermediates as we investigate the role of nonnative topology in dictating the lifetime of the intermediates. Starting from an ensemble of unfolded conformations, we folded the RNA molecules by progressively adding native constraints to subdomains of the RNA defined by the ∙OH time-progress curves to simulate folding through the different kinetic pathways. We find that nonnative topologies (arrangement of helices) occur frequently in the folding simulations despite using only native constraints to drive the reaction, and that the initial conformation, rather than the folding pathway, is the major determinant of whether the RNA adopts nonnative topology during folding. From these analyses we conclude that biases in the initial conformation likely determine the relative flux through parallel RNA folding pathways.
许多 RNA 分子只有在折叠成独特的三维结构后才能发挥其生物学功能。对于长非编码 RNA 分子来说,找到天然拓扑结构的复杂性可能是正确折叠成具有生物活性结构的主要障碍。RNA 分子可能折叠成接近天然的结构,但由于拓扑障碍(如交叉链或不正确堆叠的螺旋)而无法继续折叠成正确的结构。因此,实现天然构象需要解折叠和重新折叠,导致产生长寿命的中间产物。我们研究了拓扑结构在两个系统发育相关的催化型 I 内含子(Twort 和 Azoarcus 型 I 核酶)折叠中的作用。描述这些核酶在 Mg2+介导下折叠的动力学模型先前是通过时间分辨的羟基(·OH)自由基足迹法确定的。对于每种 RNA,都解析了由平行中间体形成的两个中间体。本文中,我们使用这些数据和分析超速离心压缩分析来约束这些折叠中间体的粗粒度模型,以研究非天然拓扑结构在决定中间体寿命中的作用。从一组展开构象开始,我们通过逐步向 RNA 的亚结构添加天然约束来折叠 RNA 分子,这些亚结构由·OH 时间进程曲线定义,以模拟通过不同的动力学途径进行折叠。我们发现,尽管仅使用天然约束来驱动反应,但在折叠模拟中经常出现非天然拓扑结构(螺旋排列),并且初始构象而不是折叠途径是决定 RNA 在折叠过程中是否采用非天然拓扑结构的主要因素。从这些分析中,我们得出结论,初始构象的偏差可能决定了平行 RNA 折叠途径的相对通量。