| Literature DB >> 30992561 |
Robert J Trachman1, Alexis Autour2, Sunny C Y Jeng3, Amir Abdolahzadeh3, Alessio Andreoni1, Razvan Cojocaru3, Ramil Garipov3, Elena V Dolgosheina3, Jay R Knutson1, Michael Ryckelynck2, Peter J Unrau3, Adrian R Ferré-D'Amaré4.
Abstract
Several turn-on RNA aptamers that activate small-molecule fluorophores have been selected in vitro. Among these, the ~30 nucleotide Mango-III is notable because it binds the thiazole orange derivative TO1-Biotin with high affinity and fluoresces brightly (quantum yield 0.55). Uniquely among related aptamers, Mango-III exhibits biphasic thermal melting, characteristic of molecules with tertiary structure. We report crystal structures of TO1-Biotin complexes of Mango-III, a structure-guided mutant Mango-III(A10U), and a functionally reselected mutant iMango-III. The structures reveal a globular architecture arising from an unprecedented pseudoknot-like connectivity between a G-quadruplex and an embedded non-canonical duplex. The fluorophore is restrained into a planar conformation by the G-quadruplex, a lone, long-range trans Watson-Crick pair (whose A10U mutation increases quantum yield to 0.66), and a pyrimidine perpendicular to the nucleobase planes of those motifs. The improved iMango-III and Mango-III(A10U) fluoresce ~50% brighter than enhanced green fluorescent protein, making them suitable tags for live cell RNA visualization.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30992561 PMCID: PMC7380332 DOI: 10.1038/s41589-019-0267-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040