Specificity of ribonucleoprotein interaction determined by RNA folding during complex formulation.
Article Details
- CitationCopy to clipboard
Allain FH, Gubser CC, Howe PW, Nagai K, Neuhaus D, Varani G
Specificity of ribonucleoprotein interaction determined by RNA folding during complex formulation.
Nature. 1996 Apr 18;380(6575):646-50.
- PubMed ID
- 8602269 [ View in PubMed]
- Abstract
Many proteins involved in pre-mRNA processing contain one or more copies of a 70-90-amino-acid alphabeta module called the ribonucleoprotein domain. RNA maturation depends on the specific recognition by ribonucleoproteins of RNA elements within pre-mRNAs and small nuclear RNAs. The human U1A protein binds an RNA hairpin during splicing, and regulates its own expression by binding an internal loop in the 3'-untranslated region of its pre-mRNA, preventing polyadenylation. Here we report the nuclear magnetic resonance structure of the complex between the regulatory element of the U1A 3'-untranslated region (UTR) and the U1A protein RNA-binding domain. Specific intermolecular recognition requires the interaction of the variable loops of the ribonucleoprotein domain with the well-structured helical regions of the RNA. Formation of the complex then orders the flexible RNA single-stranded loop against the protein beta-sheet surface, and reorganizes the carboxy-terminal region of the protein to maximize surface complementarity and functional group recognition.