Sandbox Reserved 1106

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Then, from a nucleotide point of view, hAgo1 shows 6 RNA-specific interactions with ribose 2’OH of let-7 (U1, G2, G4, G5, A7 and A8). There are either direct or water-mediated through the side- or main- chain atoms of hAgo1 like for hAgo2/miR20a. However, there is one interaction presents in hAgo2/miR20a that is missing in hAgo1/let-7 ; it is the one with U6 since this base is slightly modified because of the shift of α7 in the L2 toward the N domain. Furthermore, the first adenine base has a syn conformation around the glycosidic bond and the last two bases are piled in the PAZ domain
Then, from a nucleotide point of view, hAgo1 shows 6 RNA-specific interactions with ribose 2’OH of let-7 (U1, G2, G4, G5, A7 and A8). There are either direct or water-mediated through the side- or main- chain atoms of hAgo1 like for hAgo2/miR20a. However, there is one interaction presents in hAgo2/miR20a that is missing in hAgo1/let-7 ; it is the one with U6 since this base is slightly modified because of the shift of α7 in the L2 toward the N domain. Furthermore, the first adenine base has a syn conformation around the glycosidic bond and the last two bases are piled in the PAZ domain
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Finally, one of the most important aspect is the non-5’ phosphorylated strand ; indeed the U1 base of let-7 and the 5’P of hAgo1 are interacted with protein residues of the Mid and PIWI domains which avoid an interaction between them, preventing a phosphorylation which is important for accurate slicing activity. <ref name="source1"> </ref>
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Finally, one of the most important aspect is the non-5’ phosphorylated strand ; indeed the U1 base of let-7 and the 5’P of hAgo1 are interacted with protein residues of the Mid and PIWI domains which avoid an interaction between them, preventing a phosphorylation which is important for accurate slicing activity. <ref name="source1"/>
''Knowing that the nine first 9 nucleotids of let-7 are: 5’AAUAUUAAA3’.''
''Knowing that the nine first 9 nucleotids of let-7 are: 5’AAUAUUAAA3’.''

Revision as of 14:43, 17 January 2020

This Sandbox is Reserved from 25/11/2019, through 30/9/2020 for use in the course "Structural Biology" taught by Bruno Kieffer at the University of Strasbourg, ESBS. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1091 through Sandbox Reserved 1115.
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Argonaute 1 (PDB 4KXT)

Structure of human Argonaute 1 in complex with guide RNA

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References

[1] Gunter Meister, et al. (2005, December). Identification of Novel Argonaute-Associated Proteins. Current Biology, 2149-2155. [4]

[2] Bethany A Jawosky et al. (2006, September). Involvement of AGO1 and AGO2 in mammalian transcriptional silencing. Nature Structural and Molecular biology, 787-792.[5]

[3] Ligang Wu, et al. (2008, September). Importance of translation and Nonnucleolytic Ago Proteins for On- Target RNA Interference. Current Biology, 1327-1332.[6]

[4] Christopher R. Faehnle, et al. (2013, May). The making of a Slicer: Activation of Human Argonaute-1. Cell Reports. [7]

[5] Daniel Völler, et al. (2016, August). Argonaute family protein expression in normal tissue and cancer entities. Plos one.[8]

[6] Schalk C. et al. (2017, February). Small RNA-mediated repair of UV-induced DNA lesions by the DNA damagebinding protein 2 and Argonaute 1. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. (PNAS) USA 114, E2965–E2974.[9]

[7] Elad Elkayam, et al. (2017, August). Multivalent recruitment of human argonaute by GW182. Molecular Cell, 646-658. [10]

[8] Lidiya Lisitskaya, et al. (2018). DNA Interference and beyond : Structure and Functions of Prokaryotic Argonaute Proteins. Nature Communications.[11]

[9] Ena Secic, et al. (2019, October). Further Elucidation of the argonaute and dicer protein families in the model grass species Brachypodium distachyon. Frontiers in Plant Science.[12]

[10] ZhenLong Ye, et al. (2015, July). Argonaute 2: A Novel Rising Star in Cancer Research. Journal of Cancer, 877-882. [13]

JSmol in Proteopedia [4]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Christopher R. Faehnle, et al. (2013, May). The making of a Slicer: Activation of Human Argonaute-1. Cell Reports. [1]
  2. Ena Secic, et al. (2019, October). Further Elucidation of the argonaute and dicer protein families in the model grass species Brachypodium distachyon. Frontiers in Plant Science. [2]
  3. Gunter Meister, et al. (2005, December). Identification of Novel Argonaute-Associated Proteins. Current Biology, 2149-2155. [3]
  4. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
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