The α-Hemolysin protein pore has been previously used to study the unzipping kinetics of DNA duplexes, taking advantage of its sub-2nm pore constriction, which permits single stranded nucleic acids but not double stranded structures. Here we present the first extensive nanopore study of RNA unzipping kinetics as a function of voltage and temperature, and compare it with DNA unzipping of molecules with identical primary sequence. Our studies reveal clear differences between RNA and DNA, having similar bulk melting properties, highlighting the nanopore ability to probe subtle differences in nucleic acids' free energy and their interactions with the pore. In addition, we find that RNA hybrids with different overhang sequences display large difference in both unzipping times and current blockage signals. These results may be interpreted in the context of strong interactions between poly-A tail and the pore. Our work sheds light on the mechanics of nanopore unzipping and its sensitivity to small differences in nucleic acid base pairing stability. We currently in the process of developing a theoretical model to explain these observations, which will also set the stage for further studies involving multiple hairpin structures of RNA, and to more complicated and interesting biological problems, involving RNA-helicase interactions.1. Mathe, J., Visram, H., Viasnoff, V., Rabin, Y. & Meller, A. (2004) Nanopore unzipping of individual DNA hairpin molecules. Biophys J 87, 3205-3212.2. Dudko, O., Mathe, J., Szabo, A., Meller, A. & Hummer, G. (2007) Extracting kinetics from single-molecule force spectroscopy: Nanopore unzipping of DNA hairpins. Biophys. J. 92, 4188-4195.