4.8 Article

An RNA Paranemic Crossover Triangle as A 3D Module for Cotranscriptional Nanoassembly

Journal

SMALL
Volume 19, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202204651

Keywords

RNA design; RNA nanotechnology; RNA origami; scaffolding; self-assembly

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RNA nanotechnology utilizes structural modularity to create self-assembling nano-architectures with applications in medicine and synthetic biology. This study introduces the paranemic-crossover triangle (PXT) as a new and versatile building block for cotranscriptional folding and reveals high structural detail of the RNA PX interaction. The PXT is used to construct filaments, rings, and cubic structures, demonstrating its potential as a rigid self-folding domain for wireframe RNA origami architectures.
RNA nanotechnology takes advantage of structural modularity to build self-assembling nano-architectures with applications in medicine and synthetic biology. The use of paranemic motifs, that form without unfolding existing secondary structure, allows for the creation of RNA nanostructures that are compatible with cotranscriptional folding in vitro and in vivo. In previous work, kissing-loop (KL) motifs have been widely used to design RNA nanostructures that fold cotranscriptionally. However, the paranemic crossover (PX) motif has not yet been explored for cotranscriptional RNA origami architectures and information about the structural geometry of the motif is unknown. Here, a six base pair-wide paranemic RNA interaction that arranges double helices in a perpendicular manner is introduced, allowing for the generation of a new and versatile building block: the paranemic-crossover triangle (PXT). The PXT is self-assembled by cotranscriptional folding and characterized by cryogenic electron microscopy, revealing for the first time an RNA PX interaction in high structural detail. The PXT is used as a building block for the construction of multimers that form filaments and rings and a duplicated PXT motif is used as a building block to self-assemble cubic structures, demonstrating the PXT as a rigid self-folding domain for the development of wireframe RNA origami architectures.

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