4.5 Article

RNA kink-turns are highly anisotropic with respect to lateral displacement of the flanking stems

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 121, Issue 5, Pages 705-714

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.01.025

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Funding

  1. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [17-14683S, e-INFRA CZ LM2018140]
  2. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic

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This study utilizes molecular dynamics simulations to parameterize kink-turns and extract their bending shapes and stiffness constants from different RNA functional classes. The results reveal that kink-turns have isotropic bending stiffness but are highly anisotropic with respect to lateral displacement of the stems.
Kink-turns are highly bent internal loop motifs commonly found in the ribosome and other RNA complexes. They frequently act as binding sites for proteins and mediate tertiary interactions in larger RNA structures. Kink-turns have been a topic of intense research, but their elastic properties in the folded state are still poorly understood. Here we use extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to parameterize a model of kink-turn in which the two flanking helical stems are represented by effective rigid bodies. Time series of the full set of six interhelical coordinates enable us to extract minimum energy shapes and harmonic stiffness constants for kink-turns from different RNA functional classes. The analysis suggests that kink-turns exhibit isotropic bending stiffness but are highly anisotropic with respect to lateral displacement of the stems. The most flexible lateral displacement mode is perpendicular to the plane of the static bend. These results may help understand the structural adaptation and mechanical signal transmission by kink-turns in complex natural and artificial RNA structures.

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