RNA
Complexes with Nicks and Gaps: Thermodynamic and
Kinetic Effects of Coaxial Stacking and Dangling Ends
Posted on 2024-06-21 - 09:14
Multiple RNA strands
can interact in solution and assume a large
variety of configurations dictated by their potential for base pairing.
Although duplex formation from two complementary oligonucleotides
has been studied in detail, we still lack a systematic characterization
of the behavior of higher order complexes. Here, we focus on the thermodynamic
and kinetic effects of an upstream oligonucleotide on the binding
of a downstream oligonucleotide to a common template, as we vary the
sequence and structure of the contact interface. We show that coaxial
stacking in RNA is well correlated with but much more stabilizing
than helix propagation over an analogous intact double helix step
(median ΔΔG°37 °C ≈ 1.7 kcal/mol). Consequently, approximating coaxial stacking
in RNA with the helix propagation term leads to large discrepancies
between predictions and our experimentally determined melting temperatures,
with an offset of ≈10 °C. Our kinetic study reveals that
the hybridization of the downstream probe oligonucleotide is impaired
(lower kon) by the presence of the upstream
oligonucleotide, with the thermodynamic stabilization coming entirely
from an extended lifetime (lower koff)
of the bound downstream oligonucleotide, which can increase from seconds
to months. Surprisingly, we show that the effect of nicks is dependent
on the length of the stacking oligonucleotides, and we discuss the
binding of ultrashort (1–4 nt) oligonucleotides that are relevant
in the context of the origin of life. The thermodynamic and kinetic
data obtained in this work allow for the prediction of the formation
and stability of higher-order multistranded complexes.
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Todisco, Marco; Radakovic, Aleksandar; Szostak, Jack W. (2024). RNA
Complexes with Nicks and Gaps: Thermodynamic and
Kinetic Effects of Coaxial Stacking and Dangling Ends. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c05115