Abstract

Osmolytes and macromolecular crowders have the potential to influence the stability of secondary structure motifs and alter preferences for conserved nucleic acid sequences in vivo. To further understand the cellular function of RNA we observed the effects of a model osmolyte, polyethylene glycol (PEG) 200, and a model macromolecular crowding agent, PEG 8000, on the GAAA tetraloop motif. GAAA tetraloops are conserved, stable tetraloops, and are critical participants in RNA tertiary structure. They also have a thermodynamic preference for a CG closing base pair. The thermal denaturation of model hairpins containing GAAA loops was monitored using UV-Vis spectroscopy in the presence and absence of PEG 200 or PEG 8000. Both of the cosolutes tested influenced the thermodynamic preference for a CG base pair by destabilizing the loop with a CG closing base pair relative to the loop with a GC closing base pair. This result also extended to a related DNA triloop, which provides further evidence that the interactions between the loop and closing base pair are identical for the d(GCA) triloop and the GAAA tetraloop. Our results suggest that in the presence of model PEG molecules, loops with a GC closing base pair may retain some preferential interactions with the cosolutes that are lost in the presence of the CG closing base pair. These results reveal that relatively small structural changes could influence how neutral cosolutes tune the stability and function of secondary structure motifs in vivo.

Highlights

  • The cellular environment is a chemically complex medium compared to the dilute solution conditions used in many typical biochemical analyses

  • We examined the thermodynamics of GAAA tetraloops as a function of the stem sequence, the choice of closing base pair, and the presence of osmolytes

  • We found that non-nearest neighbor effects do not influence the relative stability of the GAAA loop or the preference for a CG closing base pair

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Summary

Introduction

The cellular environment is a chemically complex medium compared to the dilute solution conditions used in many typical biochemical analyses. PEG 200 was used as a model osmolyte as it has been shown to influence the preference for a CG closing pair for related stable RNA hairpins (Whittum & Blose, 2017), and PEG 8000 was used as a larger cosolute and potential crowding agent.

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