4.8 Article

Structure of HIV TAR in complex with a Lab-Evolved RRM provides insight into duplex RNA recognition and synthesis of a constrained peptide that impairs transcription

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 46, Issue 13, Pages 6401-6415

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gky529

Keywords

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Funding

  1. HIV RNA Biology SWG CFAR Pilot Award from the University of Rochester Center for AIDS Research - National Institutes of Health [P30AI078498]
  2. National Institutes of Health research awards [GM107520, GM076485, RR026501, GM063162, GM123864]
  3. National Institutes of Health training grants [T32GM068411, T32GM118283]
  4. Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource - National Institutes of Health [GM103393, RR001209]
  5. Department of Energy
  6. Sontag Foundation
  7. NIH [GM123864]

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Natural and lab-evolved proteins often recognize their RNA partners with exquisite affinity. Structural analysis of such complexes can offer valuable insight into sequence-selective recognition that can be exploited to alter biological function. Here, we describe the structure of a lab-evolved RNA recognition motif (RRM) bound to the HIV-1 trans-activation response (TAR) RNA element at 1.80 angstrom-resolution. The complex reveals a trio of arginines in an evolved beta 2-beta 3 loop penetrating deeply into the major groove to read conserved guanines while simultaneously forming cation-pi and salt-bridge contacts. The observation that the evolved RRM engages TAR within a double-stranded stem is atypical compared to most RRMs. Mutagenesis, thermodynamic analysis and molecular dynamics validate the atypical binding mode and quantify molecular contributions that support the exceptionally tight binding of the TAR-protein complex (K-D,K-App of 2.5 +/- 0.1 nM). These findings led to the hypothesis that the beta 2-beta 3 loop can function as a standalone TAR-recognition module. Indeed, short constrained peptides comprising the beta 2-beta 3 loop still bind TAR (K-D,K-App of 1.8 +/- 0.5 mu M) and significantly weaken TAR-dependent transcription. Our results provide a detailed understanding of TAR molecular recognition and reveal that a lab-evolved protein can be reduced to a minimal RNA-binding peptide.

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