posted on 2012-12-12, 00:00authored byDaud I. Cole, Jason D. Legassie, Laura
N. Bonifacio, Vijay
G. Sekaran, Feng Ding, Nikolay V. Dokholyan, Michael B. Jarstfer
The telomerase ribonucleoprotein complex ensures complete
replication
of eukaryotic chromosomes. Telomerase RNA (TER) provides the template
for replicating the G-rich strand of telomeric DNA, provides an anchor
site for telomerase-associated proteins, and participates in catalysis
through several incompletely characterized mechanisms. A major impediment
toward understanding its nontemplating roles is the absence of high
content structural information for TER within the telomerase complex.
Here, we used selective 2′-hydroxyl acylation analyzed by primer
extension (SHAPE) to examine the structure of <i>Tetrahymena</i> TER free in solution and bound to tTERT in the minimal telomerase
RNP. We discovered a striking difference in the two conformations
and established direct evidence for base triples in the tTER pseudoknot.
We then used SHAPE data, previously published FRET data, and biochemical
inference to model the structure of tTER using discrete molecular
dynamics simulations. The resulting tTER structure was docked with
a homology model of the <i>Tetrahymena</i> telomerase reverse
transcriptase (tTERT) to characterize the conformational changes of
tTER telomerase assembly. Free in solution, tTER appears to contain
four pairing regions: stems I, II, and IV, which are present in the
commonly accepted structure, and stem III, a large paired region that
encompasses the template and pseudoknot domains. Our interpretation
of the data and subsequent modeling affords a molecular model for
telomerase assemblage in which a large stem III of tTER unwinds to
allow proper association of the template with the tTERT active site
and formation of the pseudoknot. Additionally, analysis of our SHAPE
data and previous enzymatic footprinting allow us to propose a model
for stem-loop IV function in which tTERT is activated by binding stem
IV in the major groove of the helix-capping loop.