Probing complex RNA structures by mechanical force
Abstract
RNA secondary structures of increasing complexity are probed combining single molecule stretching experiments and stochastic unfolding/refolding simulations. We find that force-induced unfolding pathways cannot usually be interpretated by solely invoking successive openings of native helices. Indeed, typical force-extension responses of complex RNA molecules are largely shaped by stretching-induced, long-lived intermediates including non-native helices. This is first shown for a set of generic structural motifs found in larger RNA structures, and then for Escherichia coli's 1540-base long 16S ribosomal RNA, which exhibits a surprisingly well-structured and reproducible unfolding pathway under mechanical stretching. Using out-of-equilibrium stochastic simulations, we demonstrate that these experimental results reflect the slow relaxation of RNA structural rearrangements. Hence, micromanipulations of single RNA molecules probe both their native structures and long-lived intermediates, so-called "kinetic traps", thereby capturing -at the single molecular level- the hallmark of RNA folding/unfolding dynamics.
Cite
@article{arxiv.physics/0309063,
title = {Probing complex RNA structures by mechanical force},
author = {S. Harlepp and T. Marchal and J. Robert and J-F. Leger and A. Xayaphoummine and H. Isambert and D. Chatenay},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:physics/0309063},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
9 pages, 9 figures