| Literature DB >> 30652860 |
Madeleine Strickland1, Jonathan Catazaro, Rohith Rajasekaran1, Marie-Paule Strub1, Colin O'Hern, Guillermo A Bermejo2, Michael F Summers, Jan Marchant, Nico Tjandra1.
Abstract
NMR has provided a wealth of structural and dynamical information for RNA molecules of up to ∼50 nucleotides, but its application to larger RNAs has been hampered in part by difficulties establishing global structural features. A potential solution involves measurement of NMR perturbations after site-specific paramagnetic labeling. Although the approach works well for proteins, the inability to place the label at specific sites has prevented its application to larger RNAs transcribed in vitro. Here, we present a strategy in which RNA loop residues are modified to promote binding to a paramagnetically tagged reporter protein. Lanthanide-induced pseudocontact shifts are demonstrated for a 232-nucleotide RNA bound to tagged derivatives of the spliceosomal U1A RNA-binding domain. Further, the method is validated with a 36-nucleotide RNA for which measured NMR values agreed with predictions based on the previously known protein and RNA structures. The ability to readily insert U1A binding sites into ubiquitous hairpin and/or loop structures should make this approach broadly applicable for the atomic-level study of large RNAs.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30652860 PMCID: PMC6572783 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b11384
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419