Sandbox Reserved 939

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When the <scene name='57/579709/Y423/3'>Tyr423 residue</scene> was mutated to alanine or phenylalanine, RNA binding was abolished. This residue corresponds to the Tyr13 residue of the U1A N-terminal RRM and is located on the &beta;-sheet surface in the &beta;1 strand. Thus, similar to U1A N-terminal RRM and other canonical RRMs, the &beta;-sheet surface plays an important role in RNA binding in the U11/U12-65K C-terminal RRM. In U1A, residues in the loop connecting &beta;2 and &beta;3 are also involved in RNA binding by interacting with the bases or the backbone of the RNA. Mutating <scene name='57/579709/Loop/1'>Arg464 or Lys466</scene> to glutamine in the corresponding loop in the 65K C-terminal RRM led to a large reduction in binding affinity in the case of Arg464 and complete abolishment of RNA binding in the case of Lys466. These residues correspond to residues Lys50 and Arg52 in the U1A N-terminal RRM. In conclusion, both the &beta;-sheet surface and the &beta;2&ndash;&beta;3 seem to contribute to RNA binding in the 65K C-terminal RRM.
When the <scene name='57/579709/Y423/3'>Tyr423 residue</scene> was mutated to alanine or phenylalanine, RNA binding was abolished. This residue corresponds to the Tyr13 residue of the U1A N-terminal RRM and is located on the &beta;-sheet surface in the &beta;1 strand. Thus, similar to U1A N-terminal RRM and other canonical RRMs, the &beta;-sheet surface plays an important role in RNA binding in the U11/U12-65K C-terminal RRM. In U1A, residues in the loop connecting &beta;2 and &beta;3 are also involved in RNA binding by interacting with the bases or the backbone of the RNA. Mutating <scene name='57/579709/Loop/1'>Arg464 or Lys466</scene> to glutamine in the corresponding loop in the 65K C-terminal RRM led to a large reduction in binding affinity in the case of Arg464 and complete abolishment of RNA binding in the case of Lys466. These residues correspond to residues Lys50 and Arg52 in the U1A N-terminal RRM. In conclusion, both the &beta;-sheet surface and the &beta;2&ndash;&beta;3 seem to contribute to RNA binding in the 65K C-terminal RRM.
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In contrast, mutating potential RNA-contacting residues (Arg411, Val409) in the N-terminal expansion had only a moderate effect on RNA affinity. However, since a protein construct lacking the N-terminal expansion had no RNA binding activity, the N-terminal expansion is clearly important for RNA binding, although it may not directly contact RNA. Indeed, thermal denaturation assays showed that the N-terminal expansion confers stability to the core RRM fold, which alone is unable to bind RNA.
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In contrast, mutating potential RNA-contacting residues (Arg411, Val409) in the N-terminal expansion had only a moderate effect on RNA affinity. However, the N-terminal expansion is clearly essential for RNA binding, since a protein construct lacking the N-terminal expansion failed to bind RNA. Although it is currently not known whether the N-terminal expansion is directly involved in RNA binding, thermal denaturation assays showed that the N-terminal expansion confers stability to the core RRM fold, which alone is unable to bind RNA.
==References==
==References==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 21:03, 18 May 2014

This Sandbox is Reserved from 01/04/2014, through 30/06/2014 for use in the course "510042. Protein structure, function and folding" taught by Prof Adrian Goldman, Tommi Kajander, Taru Meri, Konstantin Kogan and Juho Kellosalo at the University of Helsinki. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 923 through Sandbox Reserved 947.
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Crystal structure of the human U11/U12-65K C-terminal RRM (PDB ID: 3egn).

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