Author:
Ye Xuan,Yang Wen,Yi Soon,Zhao Yanan,Yang Fan,Varani Gabriele,Jankowsky Eckhard
Abstract
ABSTRACTThe specificity of RNA-binding proteins for their target sequences varies considerably. Yet, it is not understood how certain proteins achieve markedly higher sequence specificity than most others. Here we show that the RNA Recognition Motif of RbFox accomplishes extraordinary sequence specificity by employing functionally and structurally distinct binding modes. Affinity measurements of RbFox for all binding site variants reveal the existence of two different binding modes. The first exclusively binds the cognate and a closely related RNA variant with high affinity. The second mode accommodates all other RNAs with greatly reduced affinity, thereby imposing large thermodynamic penalties on even near-cognate sequences. NMR studies indicate marked structural differences between the two binding modes, including large conformational rearrangements distant from the RNA binding site. Distinct binding modes by a single RNA binding module explain extraordinary sequence selectivity and reveal an unknown layer of functional diversity, cross talk and regulation for RNA-protein interactions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory