Login / Signup

Molecular insights into the stereospecificity of arginine in RNA tetraloop folding.

Amal VijayArnab Mukherjee
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
One of the hypotheses for the homochirality of amino acids in the context of the origin of life is that only a particular stereoisomer provides preferential stability to RNA folding by acting as a chemical chaperon. However, the effect at the molecular level is not well understood. This study provides a molecular understanding of such preferential stability for a small GAAA RNA tetraloop in the presence of chiral arginine through a multidimensional free energy landscape constructed using a combination of umbrella sampling and parallel bias metadynamics (PBMetaD) simulations. We show that the origin of the chirality difference in RNA folding-unfolding dynamics is due to differences in the configurational diversity of RNA in adopting various non-natural conformations that accompany the diverse binding modes of D-arginine and L-arginine. We show that while D-arginine stabilizes the native folded state of RNA, L-arginine destabilizes it. Furthermore, free energy calculations on the binding of D- and L-arginine reveal a specific geometric constraint that helps D-arginine to stack with the terminal base pairs of RNA and pushes L-arginine for groove binding.
Keyphrases
  • nitric oxide
  • amino acid
  • single molecule
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • randomized controlled trial
  • gene expression
  • mass spectrometry
  • systematic review
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • dna binding
  • binding protein