4.8 Article

Peptide-RNA Coacervates as a Cradle for the Evolution of Folded Domains

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 31, Pages 14150-14160

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c03819

Keywords

forms coacervates; Double electron; electron resonance (DEER)

Funding

  1. Israeli Science Foundation [2253/18, 783/18]
  2. Weizmann Institute of Science and the PBC Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
  3. Kaete Klausner Fellowship
  4. Erich Klieger Professorial Chair in Chemical Physics

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Peptide-RNA coacervates may promote the exploration of novel peptide conformations and have a key role in protein evolution. Dimer formation of peptides was observed in the coacervates and might be influenced by RNA binding.
Peptide-RNA coacervates can result in the concentration and compartmentalization of simple biopolymers. Given their primordial relevance, peptide-RNA coacervates may have also been a key site of early protein evolution. However, the extent to which such coacervates might promote or suppress the exploration of novel peptide conformations is fundamentally unknown. To this end, we used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR) to characterize the structure and dynamics of an ancient and ubiquitous nucleic acid binding element, the helix-hairpin-helix (HhH) motif, alone and in the presence of RNA, with which it spectroscopy applied to singly labeled peptides containing one HhH motif revealed the presence of dimers, even in the absence of RNA. Moreover, dimer formation is promoted upon RNA binding and was detectable within peptide-RNA coacervates. DEER measurements of spin-diluted, doubly labeled peptides in solution indicated transient a-helical character. The distance distributions between spin labels in the dimer and the signatures of ahelical folding are consistent with the symmetric (HhH)(2)-Fold, which is generated upon duplication and fusion of a single HhH motif and traditionally associated with dsDNA binding. These results support the hypothesis that coacervates are a unique testing ground for peptide oligomerization and that phase-separating peptides could have been a resource for the construction of complex protein structures via common evolutionary processes, such as duplication and fusion.

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