Urea-induced denaturation of PreQ1-riboswitch
Jeseong Yoon, D. Thirumalai, Changbong Hyeon

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to uncover how urea denatures RNA, revealing that water penetration precedes urea interaction, contrasting protein denaturation mechanisms and highlighting urea's effectiveness as a nucleic acid denaturant.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed molecular mechanism of urea-induced RNA denaturation, emphasizing water's role in initial base pair disruption and urea's dynamic interactions with RNA bases.
Findings
Urea destabilizes both secondary and tertiary RNA structures.
Water infiltration into base pairs triggers initial disruption.
Urea interacts dynamically with RNA bases through hydrogen bonds and stacking.
Abstract
Urea, a polar molecule with a large dipole moment, not only destabilizes the folded RNA structures, but can also enhance the folding rates of large ribozymes. Unlike the mechanism of urea-induced unfolding of proteins, which is well understood, the action of urea on RNA has barely been explored. We performed extensive all atom molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to determine the molecular underpinnings of urea-induced RNA denaturation. Urea displays its denaturing power in both secondary and tertiary motifs of the riboswitch (RS) structure. Our simulations reveal that the denaturation of RNA structures is mainly driven by the hydrogen bonds and stacking interactions of urea with the bases. Through detailed studies of the simulation trajectories, we found that geminate pairs between urea and bases due to hydrogen bonds and stacks persist only ~ (0.1-1) ns, which suggests that urea-base…
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