Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair

Osmolytes and macromolecular crowders have the potential to influence the stability of secondary structure motifs and alter preferences for conserved nucleic acid sequences in vivo. To further understand the cellular function of RNA we observed the effects of a model osmolyte, polyethylene glycol (P...

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Main Authors: Kaethe N. Leonard, Joshua M. Blose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-02-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4236.pdf
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spelling doaj-e7d62fd7f39f4652be1772f40df1e4702020-11-24T23:13:41ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-02-016e423610.7717/peerj.4236Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pairKaethe N. Leonard0Joshua M. Blose1Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, State University of New York, The College at Brockport, Brockport, NY, United States of AmericaDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistry, State University of New York, The College at Brockport, Brockport, NY, United States of AmericaOsmolytes and macromolecular crowders have the potential to influence the stability of secondary structure motifs and alter preferences for conserved nucleic acid sequences in vivo. To further understand the cellular function of RNA we observed the effects of a model osmolyte, polyethylene glycol (PEG) 200, and a model macromolecular crowding agent, PEG 8000, on the GAAA tetraloop motif. GAAA tetraloops are conserved, stable tetraloops, and are critical participants in RNA tertiary structure. They also have a thermodynamic preference for a CG closing base pair. The thermal denaturation of model hairpins containing GAAA loops was monitored using UV-Vis spectroscopy in the presence and absence of PEG 200 or PEG 8000. Both of the cosolutes tested influenced the thermodynamic preference for a CG base pair by destabilizing the loop with a CG closing base pair relative to the loop with a GC closing base pair. This result also extended to a related DNA triloop, which provides further evidence that the interactions between the loop and closing base pair are identical for the d(GCA) triloop and the GAAA tetraloop. Our results suggest that in the presence of model PEG molecules, loops with a GC closing base pair may retain some preferential interactions with the cosolutes that are lost in the presence of the CG closing base pair. These results reveal that relatively small structural changes could influence how neutral cosolutes tune the stability and function of secondary structure motifs in vivo.https://peerj.com/articles/4236.pdfMacromolecular crowdingGNRAGAAAOsmolytesNucleic acid structureRNA folding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kaethe N. Leonard
Joshua M. Blose
spellingShingle Kaethe N. Leonard
Joshua M. Blose
Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair
PeerJ
Macromolecular crowding
GNRA
GAAA
Osmolytes
Nucleic acid structure
RNA folding
author_facet Kaethe N. Leonard
Joshua M. Blose
author_sort Kaethe N. Leonard
title Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair
title_short Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair
title_full Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair
title_fullStr Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair
title_full_unstemmed Effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable GAAA tetraloops and their preference for a CG closing base pair
title_sort effects of osmolytes and macromolecular crowders on stable gaaa tetraloops and their preference for a cg closing base pair
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Osmolytes and macromolecular crowders have the potential to influence the stability of secondary structure motifs and alter preferences for conserved nucleic acid sequences in vivo. To further understand the cellular function of RNA we observed the effects of a model osmolyte, polyethylene glycol (PEG) 200, and a model macromolecular crowding agent, PEG 8000, on the GAAA tetraloop motif. GAAA tetraloops are conserved, stable tetraloops, and are critical participants in RNA tertiary structure. They also have a thermodynamic preference for a CG closing base pair. The thermal denaturation of model hairpins containing GAAA loops was monitored using UV-Vis spectroscopy in the presence and absence of PEG 200 or PEG 8000. Both of the cosolutes tested influenced the thermodynamic preference for a CG base pair by destabilizing the loop with a CG closing base pair relative to the loop with a GC closing base pair. This result also extended to a related DNA triloop, which provides further evidence that the interactions between the loop and closing base pair are identical for the d(GCA) triloop and the GAAA tetraloop. Our results suggest that in the presence of model PEG molecules, loops with a GC closing base pair may retain some preferential interactions with the cosolutes that are lost in the presence of the CG closing base pair. These results reveal that relatively small structural changes could influence how neutral cosolutes tune the stability and function of secondary structure motifs in vivo.
topic Macromolecular crowding
GNRA
GAAA
Osmolytes
Nucleic acid structure
RNA folding
url https://peerj.com/articles/4236.pdf
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