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Effects of Preferential Counterion Interactions on the Specificity of RNA Folding.

Joon Ho RohDuncan KilburnReza BehrouziWokyung SungR M BriberSarah A Woodson
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2018)
The real-time search for native RNA structure is essential for the operation of regulatory RNAs. We previously reported that a fraction of the Azoarcus ribozyme achieves a compact structure in less than a millisecond. To scrutinize the forces that drive initial folding steps, we used time-resolved SAXS to compare the folding dynamics of this ribozyme in thermodynamically isostable concentrations of different counterions. The results show that the size of the fast-folding population increases with the number of available counterions and correlates with the flexibility of initial RNA structures. Within 1 ms of folding, Mg2+ exhibits a smaller preferential interaction coefficient per charge, ΔΓ+/ Z, than Na+ or [Co(NH3)6]3+. The lower ΔΓ+/ Z corresponds to a smaller yield of folded RNA, although Mg2+ stabilizes native RNA more efficiently than other ions at equilibrium. These results suggest that strong Mg2+-RNA interactions impede the search for globally native structure during early folding stages.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • nucleic acid
  • computed tomography
  • high resolution
  • ms ms
  • molecular dynamics
  • quantum dots
  • ionic liquid