Development of an RNA-protein crosslinker to capture protein interactions with diverse RNA structures in cells.
Yan HanXuzhen GuoTiancai ZhangJiangyun WangKeqiong YePublished in: RNA (New York, N.Y.) (2021)
Characterization of RNA-protein interaction is fundamental for understanding the metabolism and function of RNA. UV crosslinking has been widely used to map the targets of RNA-binding proteins, but is limited by low efficiency, requirement for zero-distance contact, and biases for single-stranded RNA structure and certain residues of RNA and protein. Here, we report the development of an RNA-protein crosslinker (AMT-NHS) composed of a psoralen derivative and an N -hydroxysuccinimide ester group, which react with RNA bases and primary amines of protein, respectively. We show that AMT-NHS can penetrate into living yeast cells and crosslink Cbf5 to H/ACA snoRNAs with high specificity. The crosslinker induced different crosslinking patterns than UV and targeted both single- and double-stranded regions of RNA. The crosslinker provides a new tool to capture diverse RNA-protein interactions in cells.