Excited–Ground-State Transition of the RNA Strand Slippage Mechanism Captured by the Base-Specific Force Field

Excited-ground-state transition and strand slippage of RNA play key roles in transcription and translation of central dogma. Due to limitation of current experimental techniques, the dynamic structure ensembles of RNA remain inadequately understood. Molecular dynamics simulations offer a promising c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of chemical theory and computation 2024-07, Vol.20 (14), p.6082-6097
Hauptverfasser: Li, Zhengxin, Song, Ge, Zhu, Junjie, Mu, Junxi, Sun, Yutong, Hong, Xiaokun, Choi, Taeyoung, Cui, Xiaochen, Chen, Hai-Feng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Excited-ground-state transition and strand slippage of RNA play key roles in transcription and translation of central dogma. Due to limitation of current experimental techniques, the dynamic structure ensembles of RNA remain inadequately understood. Molecular dynamics simulations offer a promising complementary approach, whose accuracy depends on the force field. Here, we develop the new version of RNA base-specific force field (BSFF2) to address underestimation of base pairing stability and artificial backbone conformations. Extensive evaluations on typical RNA systems have comprehensively confirmed the accuracy of BSFF2. Furthermore, BSFF2 demonstrates exceptional efficiency in de novo folding of tetraloops and reproducing base pair reshuffling transition between RNA excited and ground states. Then, we explored the RNA strand slippage mechanism with BSFF2. We conducted a comprehensive three-dimensional structural investigation into the strand slippage of the most complex r­(G4C2)9 repeat element and presented the molecular details in the dynamic transition along with the underlying mechanism. Our results of capturing the strand slippage, excited-ground transition, de novo folding, and simulations for various typical RNA motifs indicate that BSFF2 should be one of valuable tools for dynamic conformation research and structure prediction of RNA, and a future contribution to RNA-targeted drug design as well as RNA therapy development.
ISSN:1549-9618
1549-9626
1549-9626
DOI:10.1021/acs.jctc.4c00497