Abstract

Folding of large structured RNAs into their functional tertiary structures at high temperatures is challenging. Here we show that I-TnaI protein, a small LAGLIDADG homing endonuclease encoded by a group I intron from a hyperthermophilic bacterium, acts as a maturase that is essential for the catalytic activity of this intron at high temperatures and physiological cationic conditions. I-TnaI specifically binds to and induces tertiary packing of the P4–P6 domain of the intron; this RNA–protein complex might serve as a thermostable platform for active folding of the entire intron. Interestingly, the binding affinity of I-TnaI to its cognate intron RNA largely increases with temperature; over 30-fold stronger binding at higher temperatures relative to 37 °C correlates with a switch from an entropy-driven (37 °C) to an enthalpy-driven (55–60 °C) interaction mode. This binding mode may represent a novel strategy how an RNA binding protein can promote the function of its target RNA specifically at high temperatures.

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