Abstract

Pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins are helical repeat proteins that bind specific RNA sequences via modular 1-repeat:1-nucleotide interactions. Binding specificity is dictated, in part, by hydrogen bonds between the amino acids at two positions in each PPR motif and the Watson-Crick face of the aligned nucleobase. There is evidence that PPR-RNA interactions can compete with RNA-RNA interactions in vivo, and that this competition underlies some effects of PPR proteins on gene expression. Conversely, RNA secondary structure can inhibit the binding of a PPR protein to its specific binding site. The parameters that influence whether PPR-RNA or RNA-RNA interactions prevail are unknown. Understanding these parameters will be important for understanding the functions of natural PPR proteins and for the design of engineered PPR proteins for synthetic biology purposes. We addressed this question by analyzing the effects of RNA structures of varying stability and position on the binding of the model protein PPR10 to its atpH RNA ligand. Our results show that even very weak RNA structures (ΔG° ~ 0 kcal/mol) involving only one nucleotide at either end of the minimal binding site impede PPR10 binding. Analysis of binding kinetics using Surface Plasmon Resonance showed that RNA structures reduce PPR10’s on-rate and increase its off-rate. Complexes between the PPR proteins PPR10 and HCF152 and their respective RNA ligands have long half-lives (one hour or more), correlating with their functions as barriers to exonucleolytic RNA decay in vivo. The effects of salt concentration on PPR10-RNA binding kinetics showed that electrostatic interactions play an important role in establishing PPR10-RNA interactions but play a relatively small role in maintaining specific interactions once established.

Highlights

  • Pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins comprise a large family of RNA binding proteins that function primarily in the context of mitochondrial and chloroplast gene expression [1, 2]

  • We addressed the effects of RNA structures sequestering a portion of the PPR10 binding site on the kinetics of the PPR10-atpH RNA interaction

  • Analogous results were obtained with an RNA harboring a similar structure at the 3’-end (3’-6bp, see S2B Fig); this RNA was tethered to the sensor chip at the opposite end from the other RNAs we examined by Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR), and this may impact the binding kinetics

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Summary

Introduction

Pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins comprise a large family of RNA binding proteins that function primarily in the context of mitochondrial and chloroplast gene expression [1, 2]. PPR proteins influence every RNA-mediated step in organellar gene expression, including RNA. Effects of RNA structure and salt on PPR-RNA binding kinetics and affinity

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