Abstract

BackgroundMicroRNAs (miRNAs) are critical post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression. Their precursors have a globally A-form helical geometry, which prevents most proteins from identifying their nucleotide sequence. This suggests the hypothesis that local structural features (e.g., bulges, internal loops) play a central role in specific double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) selection from cellular RNA pools by dsRNA binding domain (dsRBD) containing proteins. Furthermore, the processing enzymes in the miRNA maturation pathway require tandem-dsRBD cofactor proteins for optimal function, suggesting that dsRBDs play a key role in the molecular mechanism for precise positioning of the RNA within these multi-protein complexes. Here, we focus on the tandem-dsRBDs of TRBP, which have been shown to bind dsRNA tightly.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe present a combination of dsRNA binding assays demonstrating that TRBP binds dsRNA in an RNA-length dependent manner. Moreover, circular dichroism data shows that the number of dsRBD moieties bound to RNA at saturation is different for a tandem-dsRBD construct than for constructs with only one dsRBD per polypeptide, revealing another reason for the selective pressure to maintain multiple domains within a polypeptide chain. Finally, we show that helical defects in precursor miRNA alter the apparent dsRNA size, demonstrating that imperfections in RNA structure influence the strength of TRBP binding.Conclusion/SignificanceWe conclude that TRBP is responsible for recognizing structural imperfections in miRNA precursors, in the sense that TRBP is unable to bind imperfections efficiently and thus is positioned around them. We propose that once positioned around structural defects, TRBP assists Dicer and the rest of the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) in providing efficient and homogenous conversion of substrate precursor miRNA into mature miRNA downstream.

Highlights

  • Multicellular organisms employ complex gene regulatory programs that often include posttranscriptional controls in order to establish gene-appropriate expression levels

  • We have designed a study featuring shorter double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), aiming to better understand how TRBP interacts with miRNA-relevant RNAs, as TRBP may engage in fundamentally different binding modes for these two regimes

  • Prior data shows that the dsRNA binding domain (dsRBD) from the RNase III enzyme Dicer binds to both the naturally occurring pre-mir-16-1 and a WatsonCrick (W-C) duplex of the same length with similar macroscopic binding affinities,[29] suggesting that the use of W-C duplexes as models for dsRBD-dsRNA interactions can lead to useful insights for biologically relevant sequences

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Summary

Introduction

Multicellular organisms employ complex gene regulatory programs that often include posttranscriptional controls in order to establish gene-appropriate expression levels. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are critical post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression Their precursors have a globally A-form helical geometry, which prevents most proteins from identifying their nucleotide sequence. This suggests the hypothesis that local structural features (e.g., bulges, internal loops) play a central role in specific double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) selection from cellular RNA pools by dsRNA binding domain (dsRBD) containing proteins. We focus on the tandem-dsRBDs of TRBP, which have been shown to bind dsRNA tightly

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