RNA granules serve as intermediates in RNA trafficking targeting RNAs encoding specific proteins to particular subcellular locations. RNA granules contain various components such as RNAs, RNA binding proteins, molecular motors, and components of the protein synthetic machinery. RNA have large valence for low affinity multivalent interactions, maintaining molecular connectivity during rapid remodeling of the granule. Therefore, the specific molecular composition and connectivity in a granule is fluid, sensitive to local intracellular environment. Modeling multivalent interactions in granules is challenging because of a combinatorial complexity in the number of potential molecular complexes and very rapid changes in structure. Recently we introduced a hybrid modeling approach (Falkenberg et. al, 2013) appropriate when the overall properties of the multi-molecular complex are of greater importance than the specific interactions of individual molecular components. One type of RNA granule is the A2RE granule, which contains multiple different RNA molecules, including those with A2 response elements (A2RE). Multiple RNAs are linked together in the same granule by a heptavalent scaffold TOG and a bivalent adaptor protein A2. Selectivity is defined as a preferential assembly of granules with A2RE RNAs. We perform modeling studies titrating the concentrations of various proteins, varying site pair affinities, and RNA valence. We hypothesize that there are key parameters that control granule formation, and conclude that there is an optimum concentration range for the adaptor molecule A2 that optimizes granule assembly and selectivity.
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