Abstract

RNA plays a central role in all organisms and can fold into complex structures to orchestrate function. Visualization of such structures often requires crystallization, which can be a bottleneck in the structure-determination process. To promote crystallization, an RNA-recognition motif (RRM) of the U1A spliceosomal protein has been co-opted as a crystallization module. Specifically, the U1-snRNA hairpin II (hpII) single-stranded loop recognized by U1A can be transplanted into an RNA target to promote crystal contacts and to attain phase information via molecular replacement or anomalous diffraction methods using selenomethionine. Herein, we produced the F37M/F77M mutant of U1A to augment the phasing capability of this powerful crystallization module. Selenomethionine-substituted U1A(F37M/F77M) retains high affinity for hpII (KD of 59.7 ± 11.4 nM). The 2.20 Å resolution crystal structure reveals that the mutated sidechains make new S-π interactions in the hydrophobic core and are useful for single-wavelength anomalous diffraction. Crystals were also attained of U1A(F37M/F77M) in complex with a bacterial preQ1-II riboswitch. The F34M/F37M/F77M mutant was introduced similarly into a lab-evolved U1A variant (TBP6.9) that recognizes the internal bulged loop of HIV-1 TAR RNA. We envision that this short RNA sequence can be placed into non-essential duplex regions to promote crystallization and phasing of target RNAs. We show that selenomethionine-substituted TBP6.9(F34M/F37M/F77M) binds a TAR variant wherein the apical loop was replaced with a GNRA tetraloop (KD of 69.8 ± 2.9 nM), laying the groundwork for use of TBP6.9(F34M/F37M/F77M) as a crystallization module. These new tools are available to the research community.

Highlights

  • RNA is integral to cell function and has overturned old rules that erroneously credited proteins as master regulators of key biological functions [1]

  • We sought to identify non-methionine residues within dmU1A that would maintain core packing but with sufficient volume to accommodate selenomethionine, which exhibits a slightly larger van der Waals radius than sulfur (i.e., 1.85 Å versus 2.00 Å) and a longer covalent bond (1.80 Å versus 1.95 Å) [64,83]

  • We addressed whether the dmU1A(F37M/F77M) variant was amenable to crystallization

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Summary

Introduction

RNA is integral to cell function and has overturned old rules that erroneously credited proteins as master regulators of key biological functions [1]. This work has demonstrated that RNA can adopt elegant three-dimensional folds with distinct topologies and recurrent architectural motifs [23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33]. An ingenious strategy that has facilitated the success of this process has been the use of RNA binding proteins to promote crystallization [35]. In this respect, U1A RNA-recognition motif 1 (RRM1) has shown considerable efficacy (Table 1).

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