posted on 2007-12-11, 00:00authored byJeff D. Ballin, Shashank Bharill, Elizabeth J. Fialcowitz-White, Ignacy Gryczynski, Zygmunt Gryczynski, Gerald M. Wilson
The fluorescent base analogue 2-aminopurine (2-AP) is commonly used to study specific
conformational and protein binding events involving nucleic acids. Here, combinations of steady-state
and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy of 2-AP were employed to monitor conformational transitions
within a model hairpin RNA from diverse structural perspectives. RNA substrates adopting stable,
unambiguous secondary structures were labeled with 2-AP at an unpaired base, within the loop, or inside
the base-paired stem. Steady-state fluorescence was monitored as the RNA hairpins made the transitions
between folded and unfolded conformations using thermal denaturation, urea titration, and cation-mediated
folding. Unstructured control RNA substrates permitted the effects of higher-order RNA structures on
2-AP fluorescence to be distinguished from stimulus-dependent changes in intrinsic 2-AP photophysics
and/or interactions with adjacent residues. Thermodynamic parameters describing local conformational
changes were thus resolved from multiple perspectives within the model RNA hairpin. These data provided
energetic bases for construction of folding mechanisms, which varied among different folding−unfolding
stimuli. Time-resolved fluorescence studies further revealed that 2-AP exhibits characteristic signatures
of component fluorescence lifetimes and respective fractional contributions in different RNA structural
contexts. Together, these studies demonstrate localized conformational events contributing to RNA folding
and unfolding that could not be observed by approaches monitoring only global structural transitions.