-Methyladenosine (mA) is an abundant epitranscriptomic modification that plays important roles in many aspects of RNA metabolism. While mA is thought to mainly function by recruiting reader proteins to specific RNA sites, the modification can also reshape RNA-protein and RNA-RNA interactions by altering RNA structure mainly by destabilizing base pairing. Little is known about how mA and other epitranscriptomic modifications might affect the kinetic rates of RNA folding and other conformational transitions that are also important for cellular activity. Here, we used NMR relaxation dispersion and chemical exchange saturation transfer to noninvasively and site-specifically measure nucleic acid hybridization kinetics. The methodology was validated on two DNA duplexes and then applied to examine how a single mA alters the hybridization kinetics in two RNA duplexes. The results show that mA minimally impacts the rate constant for duplex dissociation, changing by ∼1-fold but significantly slows the rate of duplex annealing, decreasing by ∼7-fold. A reduction in the annealing rate was observed robustly for two different sequence contexts at different temperatures, both in the presence and absence of Mg. We propose that rotation of the -methyl group from the preferred conformation in the unpaired nucleotide to the energetically disfavored conformation required for Watson-Crick pairing is responsible for the reduced annealing rate. The results help explain why in mRNA mA slows down tRNA selection and more generally suggest that mA may exert cellular functions by reshaping the kinetics of RNA conformational transitions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.9b10939 | DOI Listing |
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
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Southeast University, Institute of Advanced Materials and School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Institute of Advanced Materials and School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, 211189, Nanjing, CHINA.
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School of Materials Science and Engineering, Jiangsu University of Science and Technology, Zhenjiang 212100, Jiangsu, China.
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