Abstract
Guanine quadruplex (G-quadruplex) motifs in the 5′ untranslated region (5′-UTR) of mRNAs were recently shown to influence the efficiency of translation. In the present study, we investigate the interaction between cellular proteins and the G-quadruplexes located in two mRNAs (MMP16 and ARPC2). Formation of the G-quadruplexes was confirmed by biophysical characterization and the inhibitory activity on translation was shown by luciferase reporter assays. In experiments with whole cell extracts from different eukaryotic cell lines, G-quadruplex-binding proteins were isolated by pull-down assays and subsequently identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry. The binding partners of the RNA G-quadruplexes we discovered included several heterogenous nuclear ribonucleoproteins, ribosomal proteins, and splicing factors, as well as other proteins that have previously not been described to interact with nucleic acids. While most of the proteins were specific for either of the investigated G-quadruplexes, some of them bound to both motifs. Selected candidate proteins were subsequently produced by recombinant expression and dissociation constants for the interaction between the proteins and RNA G-quadruplexes in the low nanomolar range were determined by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. The present study may thus help to increase our understanding of the mechanisms by which G-quadruplexes regulate translation.
Highlights
DNA and RNA molecules rich in guanine have the potential to form unusual secondary structures known as guanine quadruplexes (G-quadruplexes)
We investigate the interaction between cellular proteins and the G-quadruplexes located in two mRNAs (MMP16 and ARPC2)
The G-quadruplex in the 5 -UTR of the mRNA of ARPC2 was only predicted by bioinformatics means [12] and has not yet been experimentally verified
Summary
DNA and RNA molecules rich in guanine have the potential to form unusual secondary structures known as guanine quadruplexes (G-quadruplexes). These motifs comprise a structure of -stacked tetrads formed by the coplanar arrangement of four Hoogsteen-paired guanines [1]. Research in the last few years revealed that G-quadruplexes in RNA molecules fulfill a number of important cellular functions: telomeric repeat-containing RNA (TERRA) was described to regulate telomerase activity and further RNA G-quadruplexes are involved in termination of transcription, polyadenylation, regulation of alternative splicing, subcellular sorting of mRNAs and modulation of translation [2,6,7,8,9]
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