Litcius/Paper detail

Critical role of backbone coordination in the mRNA recognition by RNA induced silencing complex

Lizhe Zhu, Hanlun Jiang, Siqin Cao, Ilona Christy Unarta, Xin Gao, Xuhui Huang

2021Communications Biology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite its functional importance, the molecular mechanism underlying target mRNA recognition by Argonaute (Ago) remains largely elusive. Based on extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations, we constructed quasi-Markov State Model (qMSM) to reveal the dynamics during recognition at position 6-7 in the seed region of human Argonaute 2 (hAgo2). Interestingly, we found that the slowest mode of motion therein is not the gRNA-target base-pairing, but the coordination of the target phosphate groups with a set of positively charged residues of hAgo2. Moreover, the ability of Helix-7 to approach the PIWI and MID domains was found to reduce the effective volume accessible to the target mRNA and therefore facilitate both the backbone coordination and base-pair formation. Further mutant simulations revealed that alanine mutation of the D358 residue on Helix-7 enhanced a trap state to slow down the loading of target mRNA. Similar trap state was also observed when wobble pairs were introduced in g6 and g7, indicating the role of Helix-7 in suppressing non-canonical base-paring. Our study pointed to a general mechanism for mRNA recognition by eukaryotic Agos and demonstrated the promise of qMSM in investigating complex conformational changes of biomolecular systems.

Topics & Concepts

ArgonauteBase pairRNAHelix (gastropod)Gene silencingMolecular dynamicsMessenger RNAWobble base pairBiologyBiophysicsChemistryComputational biologyGeneticsCell biologyDNARNA interferenceGeneTransfer RNAComputational chemistrySnailEcologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancer