Biomembrane force probe investigation of RNA dissociation.

Eur Biophys J

Laboratory of Biophysics and Surface Analysis, School of Pharmacy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG72RD, UK.

Published: March 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Investigations using dynamic force spectroscopy have been constrained by the available loading rates, but this study expands the range using the biomembrane force probe (BFP) for a specific RNA complex.
  • The research builds on earlier single-molecule atomic force microscopy (AFM) work, revealing that high loading rates show a significant difference in dissociation patterns between a 12-base pair RNA complex with and without a bulge, while no difference is seen at low rates.
  • The findings suggest that both RNA complexes share a similar outer dissociation barrier, but the bulge motif introduces an extra barrier closer to the bound state, indicating that helices rearrangement and fraying are critical factors in dissociation.

Article Abstract

Investigations into the energy pathways of biomolecular interactions by use of dynamic force spectroscopy are limited by the range of loading rates accessible with a single technique. In the work discussed in this paper, this range has been extended for a previously studied system by using the biomembrane force probe (BFP). This work builds on our previous single-molecule atomic force microscopy (AFM) study of the dissociation of a bulge-motif-containing RNA complex. The disparity observed, at high loading rates, between the dissociation of a 12-base pair complex with and without a central three-base pair bulge was not observed at low rates. This suggests that the two species share a similar outer barrier to dissociation and that inclusion of the bulge motif creates an additional barrier at a distance closer to the bound state. Experiments performed in different buffer environments yielded similar results. The results, when combined with those of previous studies, suggest that the shared outer barrier to dissociation is that due to a rearrangement and fraying of the ends of the helix.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00249-010-0642-7DOI Listing

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