4.6 Article

Combining temperature and force to study folding of an RNA hairpin

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages 906-917

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3cp52042k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [MCB-1054449, 1RO1 GM06854-01A1]
  2. RNA Institute at University at Albany
  3. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [1054449] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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RNA folding in cells typically occurs at mesophilic temperatures. However, in vitro, RNA can be unfolded either by increasing temperature to values that are much higher than physiological, or by mechanically pulling structures apart at ambient temperature. To directly study RNA folding at physiological temperatures and to unify thermodynamics measured by melting and pulling, we developed temperature-controlled optical tweezers (thermal tweezers) that can be used to mechanically unfold single RNA molecules at mesophilic temperatures. Folding of a 20-base-pair tetraloop hairpin was studied under different ionic conditions and at temperatures ranging from 22 degrees C to 42 degrees C. At each temperature, single hairpin molecules were held at constant force, and their two-state folding equilibria were monitored. The change in free energy derived from these measurements was used to construct a phase diagram of RNA structure using force and temperature as variables. Furthermore, we derived Delta G(0pN), T, the folding free energy at zero force and temperature T, by subtracting the stretching energy of unfolded RNA from the reversible mechanical work done to unfold the hairpin. Delta G(0pN), T and its salt dependence agree reasonably well with the predictions by the nearest neighbor model. Under each ionic condition, Delta G(0pN), T depended linearly on temperature, yielding Delta H-exp and Delta S-exp that also matched the predictions. The combination of force and temperature to study RNA folding is a step toward unifying thermodynamics measured by thermal melting and mechanical unfolding, and opens a new path for directly monitoring temperature induced RNA structural changes, as it occurs often in biology.

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