Selective RNA targeting and regulated signaling by RIG-I is controlled by coordination of RNA and ATP binding

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Abstract

RIG-I is an innate immune receptor that detects and responds to infection by deadly RNA viruses such as influenza, and Hepatitis C. In the cytoplasm, RIG-I is faced with a difficult challenge: it must sensitively detect viral RNA while ignoring the abundance of host RNA. It has been suggested that RIG-I has a ‘proof-reading’ mechanism for rejecting host RNA targets, and that disruptions of this selectivity filter give rise to autoimmune diseases. Here, we directly monitor RNA proof-reading by RIG-I and we show that it is controlled by a set of conserved amino acids that couple RNA and ATP binding to the protein (Motif III). Mutations of this motif directly modulate proof-reading by eliminating or enhancing selectivity for viral RNA, with major implications for autoimmune disease and cancer. More broadly, the results provide a physical explanation for the ATP-gated behavior of SF2 RNA helicases and receptor proteins.

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Fitzgerald, M. E., Rawling, D. C., Potapova, O., Ren, X., Kohlway, A., & Pyle, A. M. (2017). Selective RNA targeting and regulated signaling by RIG-I is controlled by coordination of RNA and ATP binding. Nucleic Acids Research, 45(3), 1442–1454. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkw816

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