4.8 Article

Widespread Protection of RNA Cleavage Sites by a Riboswitch Aptamer that Folds as a Compact Obstacle to Scanning by RNase E

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 81, Issue 1, Pages 127-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2020.10.025

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM123124, R01GM035769]

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Riboswitches are known to modulate transcription elongation or translation initiation, but a study on guanidine III riboswitch reveals that ligand binding can also protect mRNA from degradation by creating a structure that impedes scanning by regulatory endonuclease RNase E. This finding suggests that riboswitch aptamers can independently regulate gene expression by prolonging mRNA longevity in response to ligand binding.
Riboswitches are thought generally to function by modulating transcription elongation or translation initiation. In rare instances, ligand binding to a riboswitch has been found to alter the rate of RNA degradation by directly stimulating or inhibiting nearby cleavage. Here, we show that guanidine-induced pseudoknot formation by the aptamer domain of a guanidine III riboswitch from Legionella pneumophila has a different effect, stabilizing mRNA by protecting distal cleavage sites en masse from ribonuclease attack. It does so by creating a coaxially base-paired obstacle that impedes scanning from a monophosphorylated 5' end to those sites by the regulatory endonuclease RNase E. Ligand binding by other riboswitch aptamers peripheral to the path traveled by RNase E does not inhibit distal cleavage. These findings reveal that a riboswitch aptamer can function independently of any overlapping expression platform to regulate gene expression by acting directly to prolong mRNA longevity in response to ligand binding.

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