Abstract

The influence of Mg2+ ions on the secondary and tertiary structure of the RNA from bacteriophage MS2 was investigated by small-angle X-ray scattering and light scattering and by sedimentation experiments. The analysis of the outer part of the X-ray scattering curve obtained at low temperature in the absence of Mg2+ yielded a cross-section radius of gyration of 0.88 nm and a mass per unit length of 1720 g mol-1 nm-1. Very similar values for these parameters, which refer to the secondary structure of the RNA molecule, were also derived from the X-ray scattering curves obtained in the presence of different amounts of Mg2+ (0.07 to 1 ions per nucleotide). On the contrary, the inner part of the X-ray scattering curves turned out to be highly dependent on the Mg2+ concentration: the cross-section radius of gyration and the mass per unit length, which were determined from the scattering curves at small angles as parameters related to the tertiary structure of the RNA, amounted to 3.11 nm and 4000 g mol-1 nm-1, respectively, in the absence of Mg2+ and increased significantly upon raising the concentration of Mg2+. The increase of these structural parameters was found to be accompanied by a decrease of the overall radius of gyration (as revealed indirectly by X-ray scattering and directly by light scattering measurements) and by an increase of the sedimentation coefficient. The results from the investigations of the RNA at low temperature clearly establish the existence of double-stranded structures down to very low Mg2+ concentrations as well as the occurrence of Mg2+ induced changes of the tertiary structure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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