Repetitive RNA unwinding by RNA helicase A facilitates RNA annealing

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Abstract

Helicases contribute to diverse biological processes including replication, transcription and translation. Recent reports suggest that unwinding of some helicases display repetitive activity, yet the functional role of the repetitiveness requires further investigation. Using single-molecule fluorescence assays, we elucidated a unique unwinding mechanism of RNA helicase A (RHA) that entails discrete substeps consisting of binding, activation, unwinding, stalling and reactivation stages. This multi-step process is repeated many times by a single RHA molecule without dissociation, resulting in repetitive unwinding/rewinding cycles. Our kinetic and mutational analysis indicates that the two double stand RNA binding domains at the N-terminus of RHA are responsible for such repetitive unwinding behavior in addition to providing an increased binding affinity to RNA. Further, the repetitive unwinding induces an efficient annealing of a complementary RNA by making the unwound strand more accessible. The complex and unusual mechanism displayed by RHA may help in explaining how the repetitive unwinding of helicases contributes to their biological functions. © 2014 The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

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Koh, H. R., Xing, L., Kleiman, L., & Myong, S. (2014). Repetitive RNA unwinding by RNA helicase A facilitates RNA annealing. Nucleic Acids Research, 42(13), 8556–8564. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku523

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