Summary information and primary citation
- PDB-id
-
8sxl;
DSSR-derived features in text and
JSON formats
- Class
- RNA
- Method
- X-ray (1.9 Å)
- Summary
- RNA uu template binding to amp monomer
- Reference
-
Dantsu Y, Zhang Y, Zhang W (2023): "Insight
into the structures of unusual base pairs in RNA
complexes containing a primer/template/adenosine
ligand." Rsc Chem Biol, 4,
942-951. doi: 10.1039/d3cb00137g.
- Abstract
- In the prebiotic RNA world, the self-replication of RNA
without enzymes can be achieved through the utilization of
2-aminoimidazole activated nucleotides as efficient
substrates. The mechanism of RNA nonenzymatic
polymerization has been extensively investigated
biophysically and structurally by using the model of an RNA
primer/template complex which is bound by the
imidazolium-bridged or triphosphate-bridged diguanosine
intermediate. However, beyond the realm of the guanosine
substrate, the structural insight into how alternative
activated nucleotides bind and interact with the RNA
primer/template complex remains unexplored, which is
important for understanding the low reactivity of adenosine
and uridine substrates in RNA primer extension, as well as
its relationship with the structures. Here we use
crystallography as a method and determine a series of
high-resolution structures of RNA primer/template complexes
bound by ApppG, a close analog of the dinucleotide
intermediate containing adenosine and guanosine. The
structures show that ApppG ligands bind to the RNA template
through both Watson-Crick and noncanonical base pairs, with
the primer 3'-OH group far from the adjacent phosphorus
atom of the incoming substrate. The structures indicate
that when adenosine is included in the imidazolium-bridged
intermediate, the complexes are likely preorganized in a
suboptimal conformation, making it difficult for the primer
to in-line attack the substrate. Moreover, by
co-crystallizing the RNA primer/template with chemically
activated adenosine and guanosine monomers, we successfully
observe the slow formation of the imidazolium-bridged
intermediate (Ap-AI-pG) and the preorganized structure for
RNA primer extension. Overall, our studies offer a
structural explanation for the slow rate of RNA primer
extension when using
adenosine-5'-phosphoro-2-aminoimidazolide as a substrate
during nonenzymatic polymerization.