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Shortening the HIV-1 TAR RNA Bulge by a Single Nucleotide Preserves Motional Modes over a Broad Range of Time Scales.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Merriman, DK; Xue, Y; Yang, S; Kimsey, IJ; Shakya, A; Clay, M; Al-Hashimi, HM
Published in: Biochemistry
August 16, 2016

Helix-junction-helix (HJH) motifs are flexible building blocks of RNA architecture that help define the orientation and dynamics of helical domains. They are also frequently involved in adaptive recognition of proteins and small molecules and in the formation of tertiary contacts. Here, we use a battery of nuclear magnetic resonance techniques to examine how deleting a single bulge residue (C24) from the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transactivation response element (TAR) trinucleotide bulge (U23-C24-U25) affects dynamics over a broad range of time scales. Shortening the bulge has an effect on picosecond-to-nanosecond interhelical and local bulge dynamics similar to that casued by increasing the Mg(2+) and Na(+) concentration, whereby a preexisting two-state equilibrium in TAR is shifted away from a bent flexible conformation toward a coaxial conformation, in which all three bulge residues are flipped out and flexible. Surprisingly, the point deletion minimally affects microsecond-to-millisecond conformational exchange directed toward two low-populated and short-lived excited conformational states that form through reshuffling of bases pairs throughout TAR. The mutant does, however, adopt a slightly different excited conformational state on the millisecond time scale, in which U23 is intrahelical, mimicking the expected conformation of residue C24 in the excited conformational state of wild-type TAR. Thus, minor changes in HJH topology preserve motional modes in RNA occurring over the picosecond-to-millisecond time scales but alter the relative populations of the sampled states or cause subtle changes in their conformational features.

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Published In

Biochemistry

DOI

EISSN

1520-4995

Publication Date

August 16, 2016

Volume

55

Issue

32

Start / End Page

4445 / 4456

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Thermodynamics
  • RNA, Viral
  • Nucleotides
  • Nucleic Acid Conformation
  • Mutation
  • Movement
  • Models, Molecular
  • Kinetics
  • HIV-1
  • HIV Long Terminal Repeat
 

Citation

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Merriman, D. K., Xue, Y., Yang, S., Kimsey, I. J., Shakya, A., Clay, M., & Al-Hashimi, H. M. (2016). Shortening the HIV-1 TAR RNA Bulge by a Single Nucleotide Preserves Motional Modes over a Broad Range of Time Scales. Biochemistry, 55(32), 4445–4456. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00285
Merriman, Dawn K., Yi Xue, Shan Yang, Isaac J. Kimsey, Anisha Shakya, Mary Clay, and Hashim M. Al-Hashimi. “Shortening the HIV-1 TAR RNA Bulge by a Single Nucleotide Preserves Motional Modes over a Broad Range of Time Scales.Biochemistry 55, no. 32 (August 16, 2016): 4445–56. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00285.
Merriman DK, Xue Y, Yang S, Kimsey IJ, Shakya A, Clay M, et al. Shortening the HIV-1 TAR RNA Bulge by a Single Nucleotide Preserves Motional Modes over a Broad Range of Time Scales. Biochemistry. 2016 Aug 16;55(32):4445–56.
Merriman, Dawn K., et al. “Shortening the HIV-1 TAR RNA Bulge by a Single Nucleotide Preserves Motional Modes over a Broad Range of Time Scales.Biochemistry, vol. 55, no. 32, Aug. 2016, pp. 4445–56. Pubmed, doi:10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00285.
Merriman DK, Xue Y, Yang S, Kimsey IJ, Shakya A, Clay M, Al-Hashimi HM. Shortening the HIV-1 TAR RNA Bulge by a Single Nucleotide Preserves Motional Modes over a Broad Range of Time Scales. Biochemistry. 2016 Aug 16;55(32):4445–4456.
Journal cover image

Published In

Biochemistry

DOI

EISSN

1520-4995

Publication Date

August 16, 2016

Volume

55

Issue

32

Start / End Page

4445 / 4456

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Thermodynamics
  • RNA, Viral
  • Nucleotides
  • Nucleic Acid Conformation
  • Mutation
  • Movement
  • Models, Molecular
  • Kinetics
  • HIV-1
  • HIV Long Terminal Repeat