Detection of RNA–Protein Interactions in Living
Cells with SHAPE
Posted on 2015-11-24 - 00:00
SHAPE-MaP
is unique among RNA structure probing strategies in that
it both measures flexibility at single-nucleotide resolution and quantifies
the uncertainties in these measurements. We report a straightforward
analytical framework that incorporates these uncertainties to allow
detection of RNA structural differences between any two states, and
we use it here to detect RNA–protein interactions in healthy
mouse trophoblast stem cells. We validate this approach by analysis
of three model cytoplasmic and nuclear ribonucleoprotein complexes,
in 2 min in-cell probing experiments. In contrast, data produced by
alternative in-cell SHAPE probing methods correlate poorly (r = 0.2) with those generated by SHAPE-MaP and do not yield
accurate signals for RNA–protein interactions. We then examine
RNA–protein and RNA–substrate interactions in the RNase
MRP complex and, by comparing in-cell interaction sites with disease-associated
mutations, characterize these noncoding mutations in terms of molecular
phenotype. Together, these results reveal that SHAPE-MaP can define
true interaction sites and infer RNA functions under native cellular
conditions with limited preexisting knowledge of the proteins or RNAs
involved.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Smola, Matthew
J.; Calabrese, J. Mauro; Weeks, Kevin M. (2016). Detection of RNA–Protein Interactions in Living
Cells with SHAPE. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00977