Small Details Matter: The 2'-Hydroxyl as a Conformational Switch in RNA.
Leonardo DarréIvan IvaniPablo Daniel DansHansel GómezAdam HospitalModesto OrozcoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2016)
While DNA is mostly a primary carrier of genetic information and displays a regular duplex structure, RNA can form very complicated and conserved 3D structures displaying a large variety of functions, such as being an intermediary carrier of the genetic information, translating such information into the protein machinery of the cell, or even acting as a chemical catalyst. At the base of such functional diversity is the subtle balance between different backbone, nucleobase, and ribose conformations, finely regulated by the combination of hydrogen bonds and stacking interactions. Although an apparently simple chemical modification, the presence of the 2'OH in RNA has a profound effect in the ribonucleotide conformational balance, adding an extra layer of complexity to the interactions network in RNA. In the present work, we have combined database analysis with extensive molecular dynamics, quantum mechanics, and hybrid QM/MM simulations to provide direct evidence on the dramatic impact of the 2'OH conformation on sugar puckering. Calculations provide evidence that proteins can modulate the 2'OH conformation to drive sugar repuckering, leading then to the formation of bioactive conformations. In summary, the 2'OH group seems to be a primary molecular switch contributing to specific protein-RNA recognition.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics simulations
- nucleic acid
- single molecule
- health information
- genome wide
- healthcare
- small molecule
- protein protein
- copy number
- transcription factor
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- stem cells
- circulating tumor
- gold nanoparticles
- amino acid
- intellectual disability
- electronic health record
- reduced graphene oxide
- ionic liquid
- cell therapy
- carbon dioxide