4.6 Review

More than Proton Detection-New Avenues for NMR Spectroscopy of RNA

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 102-113

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201903355

Keywords

carbon direct detection; heteronuclear detection; nitrogen direct detection; NMR; RNA

Funding

  1. Fonds der Chemischen Industrie
  2. DFG in graduate school CLIC [GRK 1986]
  3. DFG in the collaborative research center 902
  4. state of Hesse

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Ribonucleic acid oligonucleotides (RNAs) play pivotal roles in cellular function (riboswitches), chemical biology applications (SELEX-derived aptamers), cell biology and biomedical applications (transcriptomics). Furthermore, a growing number of RNA forms (long non-coding RNAs, circular RNAs) but also RNA modifications are identified, showing the ever increasing functional diversity of RNAs. To describe and understand this functional diversity, structural studies of RNA are increasingly important. However, they are often more challenging than protein structural studies as RNAs are substantially more dynamic and their function is often linked to their structural transitions between alternative conformations. NMR is a prime technique to characterize these structural dynamics with atomic resolution. To extend the NMR size limitation and to characterize large RNAs and their complexes above 200 nucleotides, new NMR techniques have been developed. This Minireview reports on the development of NMR methods that utilize detection on low-gamma nuclei (heteronuclei like C-13 or N-15 with lower gyromagnetic ratio than H-1) to obtain unique structural and dynamic information for large RNA molecules in solution. Experiments involve through-bond correlations of nucleobases and the phosphodiester backbone of RNA for chemical shift assignment and make information on hydrogen bonding uniquely accessible. Previously unobservable NMR resonances of amino groups in RNA nucleobases are now detected in experiments involving conformational exchange-resistant double-quantum H-1 coherences, detected by C-13 NMR spectroscopy. Furthermore, C-13 and N-15 chemical shifts provide valuable information on conformations. All the covered aspects point to the advantages of low-gamma nuclei detection experiments in RNA.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available