A homodimer interface without base pairs in an RNA mimic of red fluorescent protein. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Corn, a 28-nucleotide RNA, increases yellow fluorescence of its cognate ligand 3,5-difluoro-4-hydroxybenzylidene-imidazolinone-2-oxime (DFHO) by >400-fold. Corn was selected in vitro to overcome limitations of other fluorogenic RNAs, particularly rapid photobleaching. We now report the Corn-DFHO co-crystal structure, discovering that the functional species is a quasisymmetric homodimer. Unusually, the dimer interface, in which six unpaired adenosines break overall two-fold symmetry, lacks any intermolecular base pairs. The homodimer encapsulates one DFHO at its interprotomer interface, sandwiching it with a G-quadruplex from each protomer. Corn and the green-fluorescent Spinach RNA are structurally unrelated. Their convergent use of G-quadruplexes underscores the usefulness of this motif for RNA-induced small-molecule fluorescence. The asymmetric dimer interface of Corn could provide a basis for the development of mutants that only fluoresce as heterodimers. Such variants would be analogous to Split GFP, and may be useful for analyzing RNA co-expression or association, or for designing self-assembling RNA nanostructures.

publication date

  • September 25, 2017

Research

keywords

  • Aptamers, Nucleotide
  • Dimerization
  • Fluorescent Dyes
  • G-Quadruplexes
  • Luminescent Proteins
  • Nucleic Acid Conformation
  • Optical Imaging

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC5663454

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85031784261

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/nchembio.2475

PubMed ID

  • 28945234

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 13

issue

  • 11