Probing Transient Riboswitch Structures via Single Molecule Accessibility Analysis

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Abstract

Riboswitches are a class of RNA motifs in the untranslated regions of bacterial messenger RNAs (mRNAs) that can adopt different conformations to regulate gene expression. The binding of specific small molecule or ion ligands, or other RNAs, influences the conformation the riboswitch adopts. Single Molecule Kinetic Analysis of RNA Transient Structure (SiM-KARTS) offers an approach for probing this structural isomerization, or conformational switching, at the level of single mRNA molecules. SiM-KARTS utilizes fluorescently labeled, short, sequence-complementary DNA or RNA oligonucleotide probes that transiently access a specific RNA conformation over another. Binding and dissociation to a surface-immobilized target RNA of arbitrary length are monitored by Total Internal Reflection Fluorescence Microscopy (TIRFM) and quantitatively analyzed, via spike train and burst detection, to elucidate the rate constants of isomerization, revealing mechanistic insights into riboswitching.

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Welty, R., Schmidt, A., & Walter, N. G. (2023). Probing Transient Riboswitch Structures via Single Molecule Accessibility Analysis. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2568, pp. 37–51). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2687-0_4

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