Noncanonical α/γ Backbone Conformations in RNA and the Accuracy of Their Description by the AMBER Force Field
Language English Country United States Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- MeSH
- Aptamers, Nucleotide chemistry MeSH
- Nucleic Acid Conformation * MeSH
- Crystallography, X-Ray MeSH
- Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy MeSH
- RNA chemistry MeSH
- Molecular Dynamics Simulation MeSH
- RNA Stability MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Aptamers, Nucleotide MeSH
- RNA MeSH
The sugar-phosphate backbone of RNA can exist in diverse rotameric substates, giving RNA molecules enormous conformational variability. The most frequent noncanonical backbone conformation in RNA is α/γ = t/t, which is derived from the canonical backbone by a crankshaft motion and largely preserves the standard geometry of the RNA duplex. A similar conformation also exists in DNA, where it has been extensively studied and shown to be involved in DNA-protein interactions. However, the function of the α/γ = t/t conformation in RNA is poorly understood. Here, we present molecular dynamics simulations of several prototypical RNA structures obtained from X-ray and NMR experiments, including canonical and mismatched RNA duplexes, UUCG and GAGA tetraloops, Loop E, the sarcin-ricin loop, a parallel guanine quadruplex, and a viral pseudoknot. The stability of various noncanonical α/γ backbone conformations was analyzed with two AMBER force fields, ff99bsc0χOL3 and ff99bsc0χOL3 with the recent εζOL1 and βOL1 corrections for DNA. Although some α/γ substates were stable with seemingly well-described equilibria, many were unstable in our simulations. Notably, the most frequent noncanonical conformer α/γ = t/t was unstable in both tested force fields. Possible reasons for this instability are discussed. Our work reveals a potentially important artifact in RNA force fields and highlights a need for further force field refinement.
References provided by Crossref.org
Improving the Performance of the Amber RNA Force Field by Tuning the Hydrogen-Bonding Interactions
Structural dynamics of propeller loop: towards folding of RNA G-quadruplex
RNA Structural Dynamics As Captured by Molecular Simulations: A Comprehensive Overview