Energetics and cooperativity of tertiary hydrogen bonds in RNA structure
Energetics and cooperativity of tertiary hydrogen bonds in RNA structure.
68
Tertiary interactions that allow RNA to fold into intricate three-dimensional structures are being identified, but little is known about the thermodynamics of individual interactions. Here we quantify the tertiary structure contributions of individual hydrogen bonds in a ribose zipper motif of the recently crystallized Tetrahymena group I intron P4-P6 domain. The 2'-hydroxyls of P4-P6 nucleotides C109/A184 and A183/G110 participate in forming the teeth of the zipper. These four nucleotides were substituted in all combinations with their 2'-deoxy and (separately) 2'-methoxy analogues, and thermodynamic effects on the tertiary folding DeltaG degrees ' were assayed by the Mg2+ dependence of electrophoretic mobility in nondenaturing gels. The 2'-deoxy series showed a consistent trend with an average contribution to the tertiary folding DeltaG degrees' of -0.4 to -0.5 kcal/mol per hydrogen bond. Contributions were approximately additive, reflecting no cooperativity among the hydrogen bonds. Each tooth of the ribose zipper (comprising two hydrogen bonds) thus contributes about -1.0 kcal/mol to the tertiary folding DeltaG degrees'. Single 2'-methoxy substitutions destabilized folding by approximately 1 kcal/mol, but the trend reversed with multiple 2'-methoxy substitutions; the folding DeltaG degrees' for the quadruple 2'-methoxy derivative was approximately unchanged relative to wild-type. On the basis of these data and on temperature-gradient gel results, we conclude that entropically favorable hydrophobic interactions balance enthalpically unfavorable hydrogen bond deletions and steric clashes for multiple 2'-methoxy substitutions. Because many of the 2'-deoxy derivatives no longer have the characteristic hydrogen-bond patterns of the ribose zipper motif but simply have individual long-range ribose-base or ribose-ribose hydrogen bonds, we speculate that the energetic value of -0.4 to -0.5 kcal/mol per tertiary hydrogen bond may be more generally applicable to RNA folding.
Silverman SK, Cech TR
Biochemistry
1999-07-06 00:00
38
27
8691-702
Animals,Catalysis,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel,Entropy,Hydrogen Bonding,Hydroxides,Kinetics,Mutation,Nucleic Acid Conformation,RNA, Catalytic,RNA, Protozoan,Ribose,Temperature,Tetrahymena,Thermodynamics,Hydroxides,RNA, Catalytic,RNA, Protozoan,hydroxide ion,Ribose
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado at Boulder 80309-0215, USA ScottSilvermancoloradoedu
Biochemistry
NIGMS GM28039
0006-2960
10.1021/bi9906118
bi9906118
181
True
10393544