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A decade of riboswitches

Serganov, Alexander; Nudler, Evgeny
Riboswitches were discovered in 2002 in bacteria as RNA-based intracellular sensors of vitamin derivatives. During the last decade, naturally occurring RNA sensor elements have been found to bind a range of small metabolites and ions and to exert regulatory control of transcription, translation, splicing, and RNA stability. Extensive biochemical, structural, and genetic studies have established the basic principles underpinning riboswitch function in all three kingdoms of life with implications for developing antibiotics, designing new molecular sensors, and integrating riboswitches into synthetic circuits.
PMCID:4215550
PMID: 23332744
ISSN: 0092-8674
CID: 213732

Structural insights into ligand binding and gene expression control by an adenosylcobalamin riboswitch

Peselis, Alla; Serganov, Alexander
Coenzyme B(12) has a key role in various enzymatic reactions and controls expression of bacterial genes through riboswitches. Here we report the crystal structure of the Symbiobacterium thermophilum B(12) riboswitch bound to its ligand adenosylcobalamin. The riboswitch forms a unique junctional structure with a large ligand-binding pocket tailored for specific recognition of the adenosyl moiety and flanked by structural elements that stabilize the regulatory region and enable control of gene expression.
PMID: 23064646
ISSN: 1545-9985
CID: 185592

Molecular recognition and function of riboswitches

Serganov, Alexander; Patel, Dinshaw J
Regulatory mRNAs elements termed riboswitches respond to elevated concentrations of cellular metabolites by modulating expression of associated genes. Riboswitches attain their high metabolite selectivity by capitalizing on the intrinsic tertiary structures of their sensor domains. Over the years, riboswitch structure and folding have been amongst the most researched topics in the RNA field. Most recently, novel structures of single-ligand and cooperative double-ligand sensors have broadened our knowledge of architectural and molecular recognition principles exploited by riboswitches. The structural information has been complemented by extensive folding studies, which have provided several important clues on the formation of ligand-competent conformations and mechanisms of ligand discrimination. These studies have greatly improved our understanding of molecular events in riboswitch-mediated gene expression control and provided the molecular basis for intervention into riboswitch-controlled genetic circuits.
PMCID:3744878
PMID: 22579413
ISSN: 0959-440x
CID: 170422

RNA-Puzzles: a CASP-like evaluation of RNA three-dimensional structure prediction

Cruz, Jose Almeida; Blanchet, Marc-Frederick; Boniecki, Michal; Bujnicki, Janusz M; Chen, Shi-Jie; Cao, Song; Das, Rhiju; Ding, Feng; Dokholyan, Nikolay V; Flores, Samuel Coulbourn; Huang, Lili; Lavender, Christopher A; Lisi, Veronique; Major, Francois; Mikolajczak, Katarzyna; Patel, Dinshaw J; Philips, Anna; Puton, Tomasz; Santalucia, John; Sijenyi, Fredrick; Hermann, Thomas; Rother, Kristian; Rother, Magdalena; Serganov, Alexander; Skorupski, Marcin; Soltysinski, Tomasz; Sripakdeevong, Parin; Tuszynska, Irina; Weeks, Kevin M; Waldsich, Christina; Wildauer, Michael; Leontis, Neocles B; Westhof, Eric
We report the results of a first, collective, blind experiment in RNA three-dimensional (3D) structure prediction, encompassing three prediction puzzles. The goals are to assess the leading edge of RNA structure prediction techniques; compare existing methods and tools; and evaluate their relative strengths, weaknesses, and limitations in terms of sequence length and structural complexity. The results should give potential users insight into the suitability of available methods for different applications and facilitate efforts in the RNA structure prediction community in ongoing efforts to improve prediction tools. We also report the creation of an automated evaluation pipeline to facilitate the analysis of future RNA structure prediction exercises.
PMCID:3312550
PMID: 22361291
ISSN: 1355-8382
CID: 232772

Metabolite recognition principles and molecular mechanisms underlying riboswitch function

Serganov, Alexander; Patel, Dinshaw J
Riboswitches are mRNA elements capable of modulating gene expression in response to specific binding by cellular metabolites. Riboswitches exert their function through the interplay of alternative ligand-free and ligand-bound conformations of the metabolite-sensing domain, which in turn modulate the formation of adjacent gene expression controlling elements. X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy have determined three-dimensional structures of virtually all the major riboswitch classes in the ligand-bound state and, for several riboswitches, in the ligand-free state. The resulting spatial topologies have demonstrated the wide diversity of riboswitch folds and revealed structural principles for specific recognition by cognate metabolites. The available three-dimensional information, supplemented by structure-guided biophysical and biochemical experimentation, has led to an improved understanding of how riboswitches fold, what RNA conformations are required for ligand recognition, and how ligand binding can be transduced into gene expression modulation. These studies have greatly facilitated the dissection of molecular mechanisms underlying riboswitch action and should in turn guide the anticipated development of tools for manipulating gene regulatory circuits.
PMCID:4696762
PMID: 22577823
ISSN: 1936-122x
CID: 166829

Long-range pseudoknot interactions dictate the regulatory response in the tetrahydrofolate riboswitch

Huang, Lili; Ishibe-Murakami, Satoko; Patel, Dinshaw J; Serganov, Alexander
Tetrahydrofolate (THF), a biologically active form of the vitamin folate (B(9)), is an essential cofactor in one-carbon transfer reactions. In bacteria, expression of folate-related genes is controlled by feedback modulation in response to specific binding of THF and related compounds to a riboswitch. Here, we present the X-ray structures of the THF-sensing domain from the Eubacterium siraeum riboswitch in the ligand-bound and unbound states. The structure reveals an 'inverted' three-way junctional architecture, most unusual for riboswitches, with the junction located far from the regulatory helix P1 and not directly participating in helix P1 formation. Instead, the three-way junction, stabilized by binding to the ligand, aligns the riboswitch stems for long-range tertiary pseudoknot interactions that contribute to the organization of helix P1 and therefore stipulate the regulatory response of the riboswitch. The pterin moiety of the ligand docks in a semiopen pocket adjacent to the junction, where it forms specific hydrogen bonds with two moderately conserved pyrimidines. The aminobenzoate moiety stacks on a guanine base, whereas the glutamate moiety does not appear to make strong interactions with the RNA. In contrast to other riboswitches, these findings demonstrate that the THF riboswitch uses a limited number of available determinants for ligand recognition. Given that modern antibiotics target folate metabolism, the THF riboswitch structure provides insights on mechanistic aspects of riboswitch function and may help in manipulating THF levels in pathogenic bacteria
PMCID:3169164
PMID: 21873197
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 137971

Structural principles of nucleoside selectivity in a 2'-deoxyguanosine riboswitch

Pikovskaya, Olga; Polonskaia, Anna; Patel, Dinshaw J; Serganov, Alexander
Purine riboswitches have an essential role in genetic regulation of bacterial metabolism. This family includes the 2'-deoxyguanosine (dG) riboswitch, which is involved in feedback control of deoxyguanosine biosynthesis. To understand the principles that define dG selectivity, we determined crystal structures of the natural Mesoplasma florum riboswitch bound to cognate dG as well as to noncognate guanosine, deoxyguanosine monophosphate and guanosine monophosphate. Comparison with related purine riboswitch structures reveals that the dG riboswitch achieves its specificity through modification of key interactions involving the nucleobase and rearrangement of the ligand-binding pocket to accommodate the additional sugar moiety. In addition, we observe new conformational changes beyond the junctional binding pocket extending as far as peripheral loop-loop interactions. It appears that re-engineering riboswitch scaffolds will require consideration of selectivity features dispersed throughout the riboswitch tertiary fold, and structure-guided drug design efforts targeted to junctional RNA scaffolds need to be addressed within such an expanded framework
PMCID:3781940
PMID: 21841796
ISSN: 1552-4469
CID: 137974

Structure-function studies of FMRP RGG peptide recognition of an RNA duplex-quadruplex junction

Phan, Anh Tuan; Kuryavyi, Vitaly; Darnell, Jennifer C; Serganov, Alexander; Majumdar, Ananya; Ilin, Serge; Raslin, Tanya; Polonskaia, Anna; Chen, Cynthia; Clain, David; Darnell, Robert B; Patel, Dinshaw J
We have determined the solution structure of the complex between an arginine-glycine-rich RGG peptide from the human fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) and an in vitro-selected guanine-rich (G-rich) sc1 RNA. The bound RNA forms a newly discovered G-quadruplex separated from the flanking duplex stem by a mixed junctional tetrad. The RGG peptide is positioned along the major groove of the RNA duplex, with the G-quadruplex forcing a sharp turn of R(10)GGGGR(15) at the duplex-quadruplex junction. Arg10 and Arg15 form cross-strand specificity-determining intermolecular hydrogen bonds with the major-groove edges of guanines of adjacent Watson-Crick G*C pairs. Filter-binding assays on RNA and peptide mutations identify and validate contributions of peptide-RNA intermolecular contacts and shape complementarity to molecular recognition. These findings on FMRP RGG domain recognition by a combination of G-quadruplex and surrounding RNA sequences have implications for the recognition of other genomic G-rich RNAs.
PMCID:3130835
PMID: 21642970
ISSN: 1545-9985
CID: 232782

Structural insights into ligand recognition by a sensing domain of the cooperative glycine riboswitch

Huang, Lili; Serganov, Alexander; Patel, Dinshaw J
Glycine riboswitches regulate gene expression by feedback modulation in response to cooperative binding to glycine. Here, we report on crystal structures of the second glycine-sensing domain from the Vibrio cholerae riboswitch in the ligand-bound and unbound states. This domain adopts a three-helical fold that centers on a three-way junction and accommodates glycine within a bulge-containing binding pocket above the junction. Glycine recognition is facilitated by a pair of bound Mg(2+) cations and governed by specific interactions and shape complementarity with the pocket. A conserved adenine extrudes from the binding pocket and intercalates into the junction implying that glycine binding in the context of the complete riboswitch could impact on gene expression by stabilizing the riboswitch junction and regulatory P1 helix. Analysis of riboswitch interactions in the crystal and footprinting experiments indicates that adjacent glycine-sensing modules of the riboswitch could form specific interdomain interactions, thereby potentially contributing to the cooperative response
PMCID:3726718
PMID: 21145485
ISSN: 1097-4164
CID: 132075

Determination of riboswitch structures: light at the end of the tunnel?

Serganov, Alexander
Riboswitches are gene control elements typically located in the 5' untranslated regions of bacterial mRNAs where they modulate the expression of associated genes in response to elevated concentrations of cellular metabolites. Metabolite binding stabilizes the evolutionarily conserved receptor domains and affects the folding of the downstream gene-controlling modules. About 20 classes of riboswitches display a large number of RNA sequences perfectly adjusted to bind their cognate cellular metabolites. The question of how riboswitches achieve exquisite specificity for various ligands has been answered for almost all major classes of known riboswitches by structural and biochemical studies of their metabolite-sensing domains. Here I outline the most recent additions to the growing collection of riboswitch structures, review the principles of riboswitch folding and metabolite recognition, and discuss whether this information can help us understand the details of genetic control and metabolite recognition in the riboswitches whose three-dimensional structures are not available
PMID: 20061809
ISSN: 1555-8584
CID: 132076