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The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface

The structure and dynamics of polyanionic biomolecules, like RNA, are decisively determined by their electric interactions with the water molecules and the counterions in the environment. The solvation dynamics of the biomolecules involves a subtle balance of non-covalent and many-body interactions...

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Autor principal: Fingerhut, Benjamin Philipp
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8640580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34816825
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cc05367a
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author Fingerhut, Benjamin Philipp
author_facet Fingerhut, Benjamin Philipp
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description The structure and dynamics of polyanionic biomolecules, like RNA, are decisively determined by their electric interactions with the water molecules and the counterions in the environment. The solvation dynamics of the biomolecules involves a subtle balance of non-covalent and many-body interactions with structural fluctuations due to thermal motion occurring in a femto- to subnanosecond time range. This complex fluctuating many particle scenario is crucial in defining the properties of biological interfaces with far reaching significance for the folding of RNA structures and for facilitating RNA–protein interactions. Given the inherent complexity, suited model systems, carefully calibrated and benchmarked by experiments, are required to quantify the relevant interactions of RNA with the aqueous environment. In this feature article we summarize our recent progress in the understanding of the electrostatics at the biological interface of double stranded RNA (dsRNA) and transfer RNA (tRNA). Dimethyl phosphate (DMP) is introduced as a viable and rigorously accessible model system allowing the interaction strength with water molecules and counterions, their relevant fluctuation timescales and the spatial reach of interactions to be established. We find strong (up to ≈90 MV cm(−1)) interfacial electric fields with fluctuations extending up to ≈20 THz and demonstrate how the asymmetric stretching vibration ν(AS)(PO(2))(−) of the polarizable phosphate group can serve as the most sensitive probe for interfacial interactions, establishing a rigorous link between simulations and experiment. The approach allows for the direct interfacial observation of interactions of biologically relevant Mg(2+) counterions with phosphate groups in contact pair geometries via the rise of a new absorption band imposed by exchange repulsion interactions at short interatomic distances. The systematic extension to RNA provides microscopic insights into the changes of the hydration structure that accompany the temperature induced melting of the dsRNA double helix and quantify the ionic interactions in the folded tRNA. The results show that pairs of negatively charged phosphate groups and Mg(2+) ions represent a key structural feature of RNA embedded in water. They highlight the importance of binding motifs made of contact pairs in the electrostatic stabilization of RNA structures that have a strong impact on the surface potential and enable the fine tuning of the local electrostatic properties which are expected to be relevant for mediating the interactions between biomolecules.
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spelling pubmed-86405802021-12-30 The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface Fingerhut, Benjamin Philipp Chem Commun (Camb) Chemistry The structure and dynamics of polyanionic biomolecules, like RNA, are decisively determined by their electric interactions with the water molecules and the counterions in the environment. The solvation dynamics of the biomolecules involves a subtle balance of non-covalent and many-body interactions with structural fluctuations due to thermal motion occurring in a femto- to subnanosecond time range. This complex fluctuating many particle scenario is crucial in defining the properties of biological interfaces with far reaching significance for the folding of RNA structures and for facilitating RNA–protein interactions. Given the inherent complexity, suited model systems, carefully calibrated and benchmarked by experiments, are required to quantify the relevant interactions of RNA with the aqueous environment. In this feature article we summarize our recent progress in the understanding of the electrostatics at the biological interface of double stranded RNA (dsRNA) and transfer RNA (tRNA). Dimethyl phosphate (DMP) is introduced as a viable and rigorously accessible model system allowing the interaction strength with water molecules and counterions, their relevant fluctuation timescales and the spatial reach of interactions to be established. We find strong (up to ≈90 MV cm(−1)) interfacial electric fields with fluctuations extending up to ≈20 THz and demonstrate how the asymmetric stretching vibration ν(AS)(PO(2))(−) of the polarizable phosphate group can serve as the most sensitive probe for interfacial interactions, establishing a rigorous link between simulations and experiment. The approach allows for the direct interfacial observation of interactions of biologically relevant Mg(2+) counterions with phosphate groups in contact pair geometries via the rise of a new absorption band imposed by exchange repulsion interactions at short interatomic distances. The systematic extension to RNA provides microscopic insights into the changes of the hydration structure that accompany the temperature induced melting of the dsRNA double helix and quantify the ionic interactions in the folded tRNA. The results show that pairs of negatively charged phosphate groups and Mg(2+) ions represent a key structural feature of RNA embedded in water. They highlight the importance of binding motifs made of contact pairs in the electrostatic stabilization of RNA structures that have a strong impact on the surface potential and enable the fine tuning of the local electrostatic properties which are expected to be relevant for mediating the interactions between biomolecules. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8640580/ /pubmed/34816825 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cc05367a Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Fingerhut, Benjamin Philipp
The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
title The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
title_full The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
title_fullStr The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
title_full_unstemmed The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
title_short The mutual interactions of RNA, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
title_sort mutual interactions of rna, counterions and water – quantifying the electrostatics at the phosphate–water interface
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8640580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34816825
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cc05367a
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