z-logo
Premium
Assaying RNA chaperone activity in vivo using a novel RNA folding trap
Author(s) -
Clodi Elisabeth,
Semrad Katharina,
Schroeder Renée
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1093/emboj/18.13.3776
Subject(s) - biology , rna , chaperone (clinical) , trap (plumbing) , computational biology , folding (dsp implementation) , protein folding , microbiology and biotechnology , biophysics , genetics , gene , physics , medicine , pathology , meteorology , electrical engineering , engineering
In the absence of proteins, RNAs often misfold in vitro due to alternative base pairings which result from the molecule being trapped in inactive conformations. We identify an in vivo folding trap in the T4 phage td gene, caused by nine base pairs between a sequence element in the upstream exon of the td gene and another at the 3′ end of the intron. During translation, the ribosome resolves this interaction; consequently the intron folds correctly and splicing occurs. The introduction of a stop codon upstream of this base pairing prevents resolution of the inactive structure so that splicing cannot proceed. We have used this folding trap to probe for RNA binding proteins which, when overexpressed, either resolve the misfolded structure or impede its formation in vivo . We distinguish between proteins which recognize the intron structure and those which bind non‐specifically and apparently ignore the intron. The first class, e.g. Neurospora crassa CYT‐18, can rescue the exonic trap and intron mutants which cause a structural defect. However, known RNA chaperones such as Escherichia coli StpA and S12 and the HIV protein NCp7, only resolve the exonic trap without suppressing intron mutations. Thus, this structural trap enables detection of RNA chaperone activity in vivo .

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here