Abstract
Transcription in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) retrovirus is regulated by binding the viral Tat protein (trans-acting transcriptional activator) to the trans-activation response (TAR) RNA sequence. Here, vacuum UV circular dichroism (VUV-CD) is used to study the structure of TAR and its complex with two peptide fragments that are important for Tat binding to TAR. The VUV-CD spectrum of TAR is typical of A-form RNA and is minimally perturbed when bound to either the short or the long Tat peptide. The CD spectra of the complexes indicate an extended structure in the arginine-rich region of Tat from amino acid residue 47 through residue 58 and a short alpha-helix within the adjacent 59-72 region. Models of TAR and its peptide complexes are constructed to integrate these spectroscopic results with current biochemical data. The model suggests that (i) the arginine-rich 49-58 region is primarily responsible for electrostatic interactions with the phosphates of the RNA, (ii) the arginine side chains can additionally interact with substituent groups of the nucleotide bases to confer base recognition in the complex, (iii) the recognition of uracil-23 in TAR is facilitated by the peptide backbone, and (iv) the glutamine-rich face of an alpha-helix within the 59-72 region pairs to bases UGG at nucleotide positions 31-33 in the TAR loop and thus provides an additional motif in the Tat trans-activating protein to recognize TAR RNA.
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More From: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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