4.4 Article

Effects of Mg2+ on the Free Energy Landscape for Folding a Purine Riboswitch RNA

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 50, Issue 14, Pages 2790-2799

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi101948k

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM58545, T32 GM008403]

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There are potentially several ways Mg2+ might promote formation of an RNA tertiary structure: by causing a general collapse of the unfolded ensemble to more compact conformations, by favoring a reorganization, of structure within a domain to a form with specific tertiary contacts, and by enhancing cooperative linkages between different sets of tertiary contacts. To distinguish these different modes of action, we have studied Mg2+ interactions with the adenine riboswitch, in which a set of tertiary interactions that forms around a purine-binding pocket is thermodynamically linked to the tertiary docking of two hairpin loops in another part of the molecule. Each of four RNA forms with different extents of tertiary structure were characterized by small-angle X-ray scattering. The free energy of interconversion between different conformations in the absence of Mg2+ and the free energy of Mg2+ interaction with each form have been estimated, yielding a complete picture of the folding energy landscape as a function of Mg2+. concentration. At 1 mM Mg2+ (50 mM K+), the overall free energy of stabilization by Mg2+ is large, -9.8 kcal/mol, and about equally divided between its effect on RNA collapse to a partially folded structure and on organization of the binding pocket. A strong cooperative linkage between the two sets of tertiary contacts is intrinsic to the RNA. This quantitation I. of the effects of Mg2+ on an RNA with two distinct sets of tertiary interactions suggests ways that Mg2+ may work to stabilize larger and more complex RNA structures.

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