Visualizing RNA conformational and architectural heterogeneity in solution

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Abstract

RNA flexibility is reflected in its heterogeneous conformation. Through direct visualization using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and the adenosylcobalamin riboswitch aptamer domain as an example, we show that a single RNA sequence folds into conformationally and architecturally heterogeneous structures under near-physiological solution conditions. Recapitulated 3D topological structures from AFM molecular surfaces reveal that all conformers share the same secondary structural elements. Only a population-weighted cohort, not any single conformer, including the crystal structure, can account for the ensemble behaviors observed by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). All conformers except one are functionally active in terms of ligand binding. Our findings provide direct visual evidence that the sequence-structure relationship of RNA under physiologically relevant solution conditions is more complex than the one-to-one relationship for well-structured proteins. The direct visualization of conformational and architectural ensembles at the single-molecule level in solution may suggest new approaches to RNA structural analyses.

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Ding, J., Lee, Y. T., Bhandari, Y., Schwieters, C. D., Fan, L., Yu, P., … Wang, Y. X. (2023). Visualizing RNA conformational and architectural heterogeneity in solution. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-36184-x

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