Structure of a conserved retroviral RNA packaging element by NMR spectroscopy and cryo-electron tomography.
Miyazaki, Y., Irobalieva, R.N., Tolbert, B.S., Smalls-Mantey, A., Iyalla, K., Loeliger, K., D'Souza, V., Khant, H., Schmid, M.F., Garcia, E.L., Telesnitsky, A., Chiu, W., Summers, M.F.(2010) J Mol Biol 404: 751-772
- PubMed: 20933521
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2010.09.009
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:
2L1F - PubMed Abstract:
The 5'-untranslated regions of all gammaretroviruses contain a conserved "double-hairpin motif" (Ψ(CD)) that is required for genome packaging. Both hairpins (SL-C and SL-D) contain GACG tetraloops that, in isolated RNAs, are capable of forming "kissing" interactions stabilized by two intermolecular G-C base pairs. We have determined the three-dimensional structure of the double hairpin from the Moloney murine leukemia virus ([Ψ(CD)](2), 132 nt, 42.8 kDa) using a (2)H-edited NMR-spectroscopy-based approach. This approach enabled the detection of (1)H-(1)H dipolar interactions that were not observed in previous studies of isolated SL-C and SL-D hairpin RNAs using traditional (1)H-(1)H correlated and (1)H-(13)C-edited NMR methods. The hairpins participate in intermolecular cross-kissing interactions (SL-C to SL-D' and SLC' to SL-D) and stack in an end-to-end manner (SL-C to SL-D and SL-C' to SL-D') that gives rise to an elongated overall shape (ca 95 Å×45 Å×25 Å). The global structure was confirmed by cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET), making [Ψ(CD)](2) simultaneously the smallest RNA to be structurally characterized to date by cryo-ET and among the largest to be determined by NMR. Our findings suggest that, in addition to promoting dimerization, [Ψ(CD)](2) functions as a scaffold that helps initiate virus assembly by exposing a cluster of conserved UCUG elements for binding to the cognate nucleocapsid domains of assembling viral Gag proteins.
Organizational Affiliation:
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland Baltimore County, 1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore, MD 21250, USA.