Author:
SUMITA MINAKO,DESAULNIERS JEAN-PAUL,CHANG YU-CHENG,CHUI HELEN M.-P.,CLOS LAWRENCE,CHOW CHRISTINE S.
Abstract
The helix 69 (H69) region of the large subunit (28S) rRNA of Homo sapiens contains five pseudouridine (Ψ) residues out of 19 total nucleotides (26%), three of which are universally or highly conserved. In this study, the effects of this abundant modified nucleotide on the structure and stability of H69 were compared with those of uridine. The role of a loop nucleotide substitution from A in bacteria (position 1918 in Escherichia coli 23S rRNA) to G in eukaryotes (position in 3734 in H. sapiens) was also examined. The thermodynamic parameters were obtained through UV melting studies, and differences in the modified and unmodified RNA structures were examined by 1H NMR and circular dichroism spectroscopy. In addition, a [1,3-15N]Ψ phosphoramidite was used to generate H69 analogs with site-specific 15N labels. By using this approach, different Ψ residues can be clearly distinguished from one another in 1H NMR experiments. The effects of pseudouridine on H. sapiens H69 are consistent with previous studies on tRNA, rRNA, and snRNA models in which the nucleotide offers stabilization of duplex regions through ΨN1H-mediated hydrogen bonds. The overall secondary structure and base-pairing patterns of human H69 are similar to the bacterial RNA, consistent with the idea that ribosome structure and function are highly conserved. Nonetheless, pseudouridine-containing RNAs have subtle differences in their structures and stabilities compared to the corresponding uridine-containing analogs, suggesting possible roles for Ψ such as maintaining translation fidelity.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
44 articles.
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