14 research outputs found
Fingerprinting Noncanonical and Tertiary RNA Structures by Differential SHAPE Reactivity
Many RNA structures are comprised of simple secondary structure elements linked by a few, critical, tertiary interactions. SHAPE chemistry has made interrogation of RNA dynamics at single-nucleotide resolution straightforward. However, de novo identification of nucleotides involved in tertiary interactions remains a challenge. Here we show that nucleotides that form non-canonical or tertiary contacts are detected by comparing information obtained using two SHAPE reagents, N-methylisatoic anhydride (NMIA) and 1-methyl-6-nitroisatoic anhydride (1M6). Nucleotides that react preferentially with NMIA exhibit slow local nucleotide dynamics and preferentially adopt the less common C2′-endo ribose conformation. Experiments and first-principle calculations show 1M6 reacts preferentially with nucleotides in which one face of the nucleobase allows an unhindered stacking interaction with the reagent. Differential SHAPE reactivities were used to detect non-canonical and tertiary interactions in four RNAs with diverse structures and to identify pre-formed non-canonical interactions in partially folded RNAs. Differential SHAPE reactivity analysis will enable experimentally concise, large-scale identification of tertiary structure elements and ligand binding sites in complex RNAs and in diverse biological environments
RNA SHAPE Analysis of Small RNAs and Riboswitches
We describe structural analysis of RNAs by SHAPE chemical probing. RNAs are treated with 1-methyl-7-nitroisatoic anhydride (1M7), a reagent that detects local nucleotides flexibility, and N-methylisatoic anhydride (NMIA) and 1-methyl-6-nitroisatoic anhydride (1M6), reagents which together detect higher-order and non-canonical interactions. Chemical adducts are detected as stops during reverse transcriptase-mediated primer extension. Probing information can be used to infer conformational changes and ligand binding, and to develop highly accurate models of RNA secondary structures
Selective 2′-hydroxyl acylation analyzed by primer extension and mutational profiling (SHAPE-MaP) for direct, versatile and accurate RNA structure analysis
SHAPE chemistries exploit small electrophilic reagents that react with the 2′-hydroxyl group to interrogate RNA structure at single-nucleotide resolution. Mutational profiling (MaP) identifies modified residues based on the ability of reverse transcriptase to misread a SHAPE-modified nucleotide and then counting the resulting mutations by massively parallel sequencing. The SHAPE-MaP approach measures the structure of large and transcriptome-wide systems as accurately as for simple model RNAs. This protocol describes the experimental steps, implemented over three days, required to perform SHAPE probing and construct multiplexed SHAPE-MaP libraries suitable for deep sequencing. These steps include RNA folding and SHAPE structure probing, mutational profiling by reverse transcription, library construction, and sequencing. Automated processing of MaP sequencing data is accomplished using two software packages. ShapeMapper converts raw sequencing files into mutational profiles, creates SHAPE reactivity plots, and provides useful troubleshooting information, often within an hour. SuperFold uses these data to model RNA secondary structures, identify regions with well-defined structures, and visualize probable and alternative helices, often in under a day. We illustrate these algorithms with the E. coli thiamine pyrophosphate riboswitch, E. coli 16S rRNA, and HIV-1 genomic RNAs. SHAPE-MaP can be used to make nucleotide-resolution biophysical measurements of individual RNA motifs, rare components of complex RNA ensembles, and entire transcriptomes. The straightforward MaP strategy greatly expands the number, length, and complexity of analyzable RNA structures
RNA motif discovery by SHAPE and mutational profiling (SHAPE-MaP)
Many biological processes are RNA-mediated, but higher-order structures for most RNAs are unknown, making it difficult to understand how RNA structure governs function. Here we describe SHAPE mutational profiling (SHAPE-MaP) that makes possible de novo and large-scale identification of RNA functional motifs. Sites of 2’-hydroxyl acylation by SHAPE are encoded as non-complementary nucleotides during cDNA synthesis, as measured by massively parallel sequencing. SHAPE-MaP-guided modeling identified greater than 90% of accepted base pairs in complex RNAs of known structure and was used to define a second-generation model for the HIV-1 RNA genome. The HIV-1 model contains all known structured motifs and previously unknown elements, including experimentally validated pseudoknots. SHAPE-MaP yields accurate and high-resolution secondary structure models, enables analysis of low abundance RNAs, disentangles sequence polymorphisms in single experiments, and will ultimately democratize RNA structure analysis
RNA Tertiary Structure Analysis by 2′-Hydroxyl Molecular Interference
We introduce a melded chemical and computational approach for probing and modeling higher-order intramolecular tertiary interactions in RNA. 2'-Hydroxyl molecular interference (HMX) identifies nucleotides in highly packed regions of an RNA by exploiting the ability of bulky adducts at the 2'-hydroxyl position to disrupt overall RNA structure. HMX was found to be exceptionally selective for quantitative detection of higher-order and tertiary interactions. When incorporated as experimental constraints in discrete molecular dynamics simulations, HMX information yielded accurate three-dimensional models, emphasizing the power of molecular interference to guide RNA tertiary structure analysis and fold refinement. In the case of a large, multidomain RNA, the Tetrahymena group I intron, HMX identified multiple distinct sets of tertiary structure interaction groups in a single, concise experiment
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Distinctive features of lincRNA gene expression suggest widespread RNA-independent functions.
Eukaryotic genomes produce RNAs lacking protein-coding potential, with enigmatic roles. We integrated three approaches to study large intervening noncoding RNA (lincRNA) gene functions. First, we profiled mouse embryonic stem cells and neural precursor cells at single-cell resolution, revealing lincRNAs expressed in specific cell types, cell subpopulations, or cell cycle stages. Second, we assembled a transcriptome-wide atlas of nuclear lincRNA degradation by identifying targets of the exosome cofactor Mtr4. Third, we developed a reversible depletion system to separate the role of a lincRNA gene from that of its RNA. Our approach distinguished lincRNA loci functioning in trans from those modulating local gene expression. Some genes express stable and/or abundant lincRNAs in single cells, but many prematurely terminate transcription and produce lincRNAs rapidly degraded by the nuclear exosome. This suggests that besides RNA-dependent functions, lincRNA loci act as DNA elements or through transcription. Our integrative approach helps distinguish these mechanisms
Single-molecule correlated chemical probing reveals large-scale structural communication in the ribosome and the mechanism of the antibiotic spectinomycin in living cells.
The ribosome moves between distinct structural states and is organized into multiple functional domains. Here, we examined hundreds of occurrences of pairwise through-space communication between nucleotides in the ribosome small subunit RNA using RNA interaction groups analyzed by mutational profiling (RING-MaP) single-molecule correlated chemical probing in bacterial cells. RING-MaP revealed four structural communities in the small subunit RNA, each distinct from the organization defined by the RNA secondary structure. The head domain contains 2 structural communities: the outer-head contains the pivot for head swiveling, and an inner-head community is structurally integrated with helix 44 and spans the entire ribosome intersubunit interface. In-cell binding by the antibiotic spectinomycin (Spc) barely perturbs its local binding pocket as revealed by the per-nucleotide chemical probing signal. In contrast, Spc binding overstabilizes long-range RNA-RNA contacts that extend 95 Ã… across the ribosome that connect the pivot for head swiveling with the axis of intersubunit rotation. The two major motions of the small subunit-head swiveling and intersubunit rotation-are thus coordinated via long-range RNA structural communication, which is specifically modulated by Spc. Single-molecule correlated chemical probing reveals trans-domain structural communication and rationalizes the profound functional effects of binding by a low-molecular-mass antibiotic to the megadalton ribosome
Fingerprinting Noncanonical and Tertiary RNA Structures by Differential SHAPE Reactivity
Many RNA structures are composed of simple secondary
structure
elements linked by a few critical tertiary interactions. SHAPE chemistry
has made interrogation of RNA dynamics at single-nucleotide resolution
straightforward. However, de novo identification of nucleotides involved
in tertiary interactions remains a challenge. Here we show that nucleotides
that form noncanonical or tertiary contacts can be detected by comparing
information obtained using two SHAPE reagents, <i>N</i>-methylisatoic
anhydride (NMIA) and 1-methyl-6-nitroisatoic anhydride (1M6). Nucleotides
that react preferentially with NMIA exhibit slow local nucleotide
dynamics and usually adopt the less common C2′-endo ribose
conformation. Experiments and first-principles calculations show that
1M6 reacts preferentially with nucleotides in which one face of the
nucleobase allows an unhindered stacking interaction with the reagent.
Differential SHAPE reactivities were used to detect noncanonical and
tertiary interactions in four RNAs with diverse structures and to
identify preformed noncanonical interactions in partially folded RNAs.
Differential SHAPE reactivity analysis will enable experimentally
concise, large-scale identification of tertiary structure elements
and ligand binding sites in complex RNAs and in diverse biological
environments
RNA Tertiary Structure Analysis by 2′-Hydroxyl Molecular Interference
We
introduce a melded chemical and computational approach for probing
and modeling higher-order intramolecular tertiary interactions in
RNA. 2′-Hydroxyl molecular interference (HMX) identifies nucleotides
in highly packed regions of an RNA by exploiting the ability of bulky
adducts at the 2′-hydroxyl position to disrupt overall RNA
structure. HMX was found to be exceptionally selective for quantitative
detection of higher-order and tertiary interactions. When incorporated
as experimental constraints in discrete molecular dynamics simulations,
HMX information yielded accurate three-dimensional models, emphasizing
the power of molecular interference to guide RNA tertiary structure
analysis and fold refinement. In the case of a large, multidomain
RNA, the <i>Tetrahymena</i> group I intron, HMX identified
multiple distinct sets of tertiary structure interaction groups in
a single, concise experiment
Fingerprinting Noncanonical and Tertiary RNA Structures by Differential SHAPE Reactivity
Many RNA structures are comprised of simple secondary structure elements linked by a few, critical, tertiary interactions. SHAPE chemistry has made interrogation of RNA dynamics at single-nucleotide resolution straightforward. However, de novo identification of nucleotides involved in tertiary interactions remains a challenge. Here we show that nucleotides that form non-canonical or tertiary contacts are detected by comparing information obtained using two SHAPE reagents, N-methylisatoic anhydride (NMIA) and 1-methyl-6-nitroisatoic anhydride (1M6). Nucleotides that react preferentially with NMIA exhibit slow local nucleotide dynamics and preferentially adopt the less common C2′-endo ribose conformation. Experiments and first-principle calculations show 1M6 reacts preferentially with nucleotides in which one face of the nucleobase allows an unhindered stacking interaction with the reagent. Differential SHAPE reactivities were used to detect non-canonical and tertiary interactions in four RNAs with diverse structures and to identify pre-formed non-canonical interactions in partially folded RNAs. Differential SHAPE reactivity analysis will enable experimentally concise, large-scale identification of tertiary structure elements and ligand binding sites in complex RNAs and in diverse biological environments