Solution structure of an informationally complex high-affinity RNA aptamer to GTP
Author(s) -
James M. Carothers,
Jonathan H. Davis,
James J. Chou,
Jack W. Szostak
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
rna
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.037
H-Index - 171
eISSN - 1469-9001
pISSN - 1355-8382
DOI - 10.1261/rna.2251306
Subject(s) - aptamer , gtp' , rna , ligand (biochemistry) , biology , nucleobase , nucleotide , base pair , binding site , hydrogen bond , biophysics , stereochemistry , combinatorial chemistry , biochemistry , dna , chemistry , molecule , receptor , genetics , enzyme , organic chemistry , gene
Higher-affinity RNA aptamers to GTP are more informationally complex than lower-affinity aptamers. Analog binding studies have shown that the additional information needed to improve affinity does not specify more interactions with the ligand. In light of those observations, we would like to understand the structural characteristics that enable complex aptamers to bind their ligands with higher affinity. Here we present the solution structure of the 41-nt Class I GTP aptamer (K d = 75 nM) as determined by NMR. The backbone of the aptamer forms a reverse-S that shapes the binding pocket. The ligand nucleobase stacks between purine platforms and makes hydrogen bonds with the edge of another base. Interestingly, the local modes of interaction for the Class I aptamer and an RNA aptamer that binds ATP with a K d of 6 μM are very much alike. The aptamers exhibit nearly identical levels of binding specificity and fraction of ligand sequestered from the solvent (81%–85%). However, the GTP aptamer is more informationally complex (~45 vs. 35 bits) and has a larger recognition bulge (15 vs. 12 nucleotides) with many more stabilizing base–base interactions. Because the aptamers have similar modes of ligand binding, we conclude that the stabilizing structural elements in the Class I aptamer are responsible for much of the difference in K d . These results are consistent with the hypothesis that increasing the number of intra-RNA interactions, rather than adding specific contacts to the ligand, is the simplest way to improve binding affinity.
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