4.6 Review

Engineering Crystal Packing in RNA Structures I: Past and Future Strategies for Engineering RNA Packing in Crystals

Journal

CRYSTALS
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cryst11080952

Keywords

ribonucleic acid; RNA; X-ray crystallography; crystal packing design; RNA motifs; nucleic acid crystallography; RNA crystallization constructs; RNA crystallography; RNA crystallogenesis

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2014-06012]
  2. Western College of Medicine and College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan
  3. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, NIH
  4. NIH [R01 CA242845, R01 AI088011, P20 GM103640, P30 CA225520]

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X-ray crystallography is a powerful method for studying the functional aspects of RNA molecules, but success is limited due to resource and time constraints. Various techniques, such as construct engineering and the use of chaperones and crystallization-friendly molecules, have been developed to aid in the formation of well-ordered RNA crystals and improve success rates in RNA crystallization.
X-ray crystallography remains a powerful method to gain atomistic insights into the catalytic and regulatory functions of RNA molecules. However, the technique requires the preparation of diffraction-quality crystals. This is often a resource- and time-consuming venture because RNA crystallization is hindered by the conformational heterogeneity of RNA, as well as the limited opportunities for stereospecific intermolecular interactions between RNA molecules. The limited success at crystallization explains in part the smaller number of RNA-only structures in the Protein Data Bank. Several approaches have been developed to aid the formation of well-ordered RNA crystals. The majority of these are construct-engineering techniques that aim to introduce crystal contacts to favor the formation of well-diffracting crystals. A typical example is the insertion of tetraloop-tetraloop receptor pairs into non-essential RNA segments to promote intermolecular association. Other methods of promoting crystallization involve chaperones and crystallization-friendly molecules that increase RNA stability and improve crystal packing. In this review, we discuss the various techniques that have been successfully used to facilitate crystal packing of RNA molecules, recent advances in construct engineering, and directions for future research in this vital aspect of RNA crystallography.

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