posted on 2022-01-21, 16:06authored byMeredith
J. Zeller, Ashok Nuthanakanti, Kelin Li, Jeffrey Aubé, Alexander Serganov, Kevin M. Weeks
RNA
molecules can show high levels of cooperativity in their global
folding and interactions with divalent ions. However, cooperativity
at individual ligand–RNA interaction sites remains poorly understood.
Here, we investigated the binding of thiamine and methylene diphosphonic
acid (MDP, a soluble structural analogue of pyrophosphate) to the
thiamine pyrophosphate riboswitch. These ligands each bind weakly
at proximal subsites, with 10 μM and 1 mM affinities, respectively.
The affinity of MDP moderately improves when thiamine or thiamine-like
fragments are pre-bound to the RNA. Covalent linking of thiamine and
MDP substantially increases riboswitch binding to a notable high affinity
of 20 nM. Crystal structures and single-molecule correlated chemical
probing revealed favorable induced fit effects upon binding of individual
ligands and, unexpectedly, a substantial thermodynamically unfavorable
RNA structural rearrangement upon binding of the linked thiamine–MDP
ligand. Thus, linking of two ligands of modest affinity, accompanied
by an unfavorable structural rearrangement, still yields a potent
linked RNA-binding compound. Since complex ligands often bind riboswitches
and other RNAs at proximal subsites, principles derived from this
work inform and support fragment-linking strategies for identifying
small molecules that interact with RNA specifically and with high
affinity.