RNA conformational propensities determine cellular activity

Author:

Kelly Megan L.ORCID,Roy Rohit,Geng Ainan,Ganser Laura R.ORCID,Manghrani Akanksha,Cullen Bryan R.,Schulze-Gahmen UrsulaORCID,Herschlag DanielORCID,Al-Hashimi Hashim M.

Abstract

Cellular processes are the product of interactions between biomolecules, which associate to form biologically active complexes1. These interactions are mediated by intermolecular contacts, which if disrupted, lead to alterations in cell physiology. Nevertheless, the formation of intermolecular contacts nearly universally requires changes in the conformations of the interacting biomolecules. As a result, binding affinity and cellular activity crucially depend not only on the strength of the contacts, but also on the inherent propensities to form binding-competent conformational states2,3. Thus, conformational penalties are ubiquitous in biology and must be known in order to quantitatively model binding energetics for protein and nucleic acid interactions4,5. However, conceptual and technological limitations have hindered our ability to dissect and quantitatively measure how conformational propensities impact cellular activity. Here, we systematically altered and determined the propensities for forming the protein-bound conformation of HIV-1 TAR RNA. These propensities quantitatively predicted the binding affinities of TAR to the RNA-binding region of the Tat protein and predicted the extent of HIV-1 Tat-dependent transactivation in cells. Our results establish the role of ensemble-based conformational propensities in cellular activity and reveal an example of a cellular process driven by an exceptionally rare and short-lived RNA conformational state.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference40 articles.

1. The roles of structural dynamics in the cellular functions of RNAs

2. Incorporation of protein flexibility and conformational energy penalties in docking screens to improve ligand discovery

3. Pre-bending of a promoter sequence enhances affinity for the TATA-binding factor;Nature,1995

4. High-Throughput Investigation of Diverse Junction Elements in RNA Tertiary Folding;Cell,2018

5. DNA mismatches reveal conformational penalties in protein–DNA recognition;Nat. 2020 5877833,2020

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