In bacteria, sulfur metabolism is regulated in part by seven known families of riboswitches that bind S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM). Direct binding of SAM to these mRNA regulatory elements governs a downstream secondary structural switch that communicates with the transcriptional and/or translational expression machinery. The most widely distributed SAM-binding riboswitches belong to the SAM clan, comprising three families that share a common SAMbinding core but differ radically in their peripheral architecture. Although the structure of the SAM-I member of this clan has been extensively studied, how the alternative peripheral architecture of the other families supports the common SAM-binding core remains unknown.We have therefore solved the X-ray structure of amember of the SAM-I/IV family containing the alternative "PK-2" subdomain shared with the SAM-IV family. This structure reveals that this subdomain forms extensive interactions with the helix housing the SAM-binding pocket, including a highly unusual mode of helix packing in which two helices pack in a perpendicular fashion. Biochemical and genetic analysis of this RNA reveals that SAM binding induces many of these interactions, including stabilization of a pseudoknot that is part of the regulatory switch. Despite strong structural similarity between the cores of SAM-I and SAM-I/IV members, a phylogenetic analysis of sequences does not indicate that they derive from a common ancestor.
CITATION STYLE
Trausch, J. J., Xu, Z., Edwards, A. L., Reyes, F. E., Ross, P. E., Knight, R., & Batey, R. T. (2014). Structural basis for diversity in the SAM clan of riboswitches. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(18), 6624–6629. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1312918111
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