Literature DB >> 31889251

Specific Nucleic Acid Chaperone Activity of HIV-1 Nucleocapsid Protein Deduced from Hairpin Unfolding.

Micah J McCauley1, Ioulia Rouzina2, Mark C Williams3.   

Abstract

RNA and DNA hairpin formation and disruption play key regulatory roles in a variety of cellular processes. The 59-nucleotide transactivation response (TAR) RNA hairpin facilitates the production of full-length transcripts of the HIV-1 genome. Yet the stability of this long, irregular hairpin becomes a liability during reverse transcription as 24 base pairs must be disrupted for strand transfer. Retroviral nucleocapsid (NC) proteins serve as nucleic acid chaperones that have been shown to both destabilize the TAR hairpin and facilitate strand annealing with its complementary DNA sequence. Yet it has remained difficult to elucidate the way NC targets and dramatically destabilizes this hairpin while only weakly affecting the annealed product. In this work, we used optical tweezers to measure the stability of TAR and found that adding NC destabilized the hairpin and simultaneously caused a distinct change in both the height and location of the energy barrier. This data was matched to an energy landscape predicted from a simple theory of definite base pair destabilization. Comparisons revealed the specific binding sites found by NC along the irregular TAR hairpin. Furthermore, specific binding explained both the unusual shift in the transition state and the much weaker effect on the annealed product. These experiments illustrate a general method of energy landscape transformation that exposes important physical insights.

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Keywords:  Energy landscape; Mfold; Nucleic acid hairpin; Nucleic acid-protein interactions; Optical tweezers; Reverse transcription; Transition state

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Year:  2020        PMID: 31889251     DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-0231-7_4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Mol Biol        ISSN: 1064-3745


  1 in total

1.  Significant Differences in RNA Structure Destabilization by HIV-1 GagDp6 and NCp7 Proteins.

Authors:  Micah J McCauley; Ioulia Rouzina; Jasmine Li; Megan E Núñez; Mark C Williams
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2020-04-25       Impact factor: 5.048

  1 in total

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