1qcu
From Proteopedia
CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF AN 18 BASE PAIR COPY CONTROL RELATED RNA DUPLEX
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedThe structures of two RNA duplexes, whose sequences correspond to portions of the ColE1 plasmid copy control RNA I and RNA II, have been determined. Crystals containing the 18mers 5'-CA CCGUUGGUAGCGGUGC-3' and 5'-CACCGCUACCAACGGUGC-3' diffract to 1.20 A resolution while those containing the 19mers 5'-GCACCGUUGGUAGCGGUGC-3' and 5'-GCACCGCUACCAACGGUGC-3' diffract to 1.55 A resolution. Both duplexes are standard A form, with Watson-Crick base pairing throughout. Use of anisotropic atomic displacement factors in refinement of the 1.20 A structure dramatically improved refinement statistics, resulting in a final R(free) of 15.0% and a crystallographic R-factor of 11.6%. Perhaps surprisingly, these crystals of the 18 base pair RNA exhibit a 36-fold static disorder, resulting in a structure with a single sugar-phosphate backbone conformation and an averaged base composition at each residue. Since the sugar-phosphate backbone structure is identical in the 36 different nucleotides that are superimposed, there can be no sequence-dependent variation in the structure. The average ribose pucker amplitude is 45.8 degrees for the 18 base pair structure and 46.4 degrees for the 19 base pair structure; these values are respectively 19% and 20% larger than the average pucker amplitude reported from nucleoside crystal structures. A standard RNA water structure, based on analysis of the hydration of these crystal structures and that of the TAR RNA stem [Ippolito, J. A., and Steitz, T. A. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 9819-9824], has been derived, which has allowed us to predict water positions in lower resolution RNA crystal structures. We report a new RNA packing motif, in which three pro-S(p) phosphate oxygens interact with an ammonium ion. Crystal structures of two plasmid copy control related RNA duplexes: An 18 base pair duplex at 1.20 A resolution and a 19 base pair duplex at 1.55 A resolution.,Klosterman PS, Shah SA, Steitz TA Biochemistry. 1999 Nov 9;38(45):14784-92. PMID:10555960[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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