Abstract

Enzymes generally are thought to derive their functional activity from conformational motions. The limited chemical variation in RNA suggests that such structural dynamics may play a particularly important role in RNA function. Minimal hammerhead ribozymes are known to cleave efficiently only in ∼ 10-fold higher than physiologic concentrations of Mg(2+) ions. Extended versions containing native loop-loop interactions, however, show greatly enhanced catalytic activity at physiologically relevant Mg(2+) concentrations, for reasons that are still ill-understood. Here, we use Mg(2+) titrations, activity assays, ensemble, and single molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) approaches, combined with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, to ask what influence the spatially distant tertiary loop-loop interactions of an extended hammerhead ribozyme have on its structural dynamics. By comparing hammerhead variants with wild-type, partially disrupted, and fully disrupted loop-loop interaction sequences we find that the tertiary interactions lead to a dynamic motional sampling that increasingly populates catalytically active conformations. At the global level the wild-type tertiary interactions lead to more frequent, if transient, encounters of the loop-carrying stems, whereas at the local level they lead to an enrichment in favorable in-line attack angles at the cleavage site. These results invoke a linkage between RNA structural dynamics and function and suggest that loop-loop interactions in extended hammerhead ribozymes-and Mg(2+) ions that bind to minimal ribozymes-may generally allow more frequent access to a catalytically relevant conformation(s), rather than simply locking the ribozyme into a single active state.

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