Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
2iz8;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- virus-RNA
- Method
- X-ray (3.3 Å)
- Summary
- Ms2-RNA hairpin (c-7) complex
- Reference
-
Helgstrand C, Grahn E, Moss T, Stonehouse NJ, Tars K,
Stockley PG, Liljas L (2002): "Investigating
the Structural Basis of Purine Specificity in the
Structures of MS2 Coat Protein RNA Translational Operator
Hairpins." Nucleic Acids Res.,
30, 2678. doi: 10.1093/NAR/GKF371.
- Abstract
- We have determined the structures of complexes between
the phage MS2 coat protein and variants of the replicase
translational operator in order to explore the sequence
specificity of the RNA-protein interaction. The 19-nt RNA
hairpins studied have substitutions at two positions that
have been shown to be important for specific binding. At
one of these positions, -10, which is a bulged adenosine
(A) in the stem of the wild-type operator hairpin,
substitutions were made with guanosine (G), cytidine (C)
and two non-native bases, 2-aminopurine (2AP) and inosine
(I). At the other position, -7 in the hairpin loop, the
native adenine was substituted with a cytidine. Of these,
only the G-10, C-10 and C-7 variants showed interpretable
density for the RNA hairpin. In spite of large differences
in binding affinities, the structures of the variant
complexes are very similar to the wild-type operator
complex. For G-10 substitutions in hairpin variants that
can form bulges at alternative places in the stem, the
binding affinity is low and a partly disordered
conformation is seen in the electron density maps. The
affinity is similar to that of wild-type when the base
pairs adjacent to the bulged nucleotide are selected to
avoid alternative conformations. Both purines bind in a
very similar way in a pocket in the protein. In the C-10
variant, which has very low affinity, the cytidine is
partly inserted in the protein pocket rather than
intercalated in the RNA stem. Substitution of the wild-type
adenosine at position -7 by pyrimidines gives strongly
reduced affinities, but the structure of the C-7 complex
shows that the base occupies the same position as the A-7
in the wild-type RNA. It is stacked in the RNA and makes no
direct contact with the protein.