» Articles » PMID: 12554868

Selection of RRE RNA Binding Peptides Using a Kanamycin Antitermination Assay

Overview
Journal RNA
Specialty Molecular Biology
Date 2003 Jan 30
PMID 12554868
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The arginine-rich domains of several RNA-binding proteins have been shown to bind their cognate RNAs with high affinities and specificities as isolated peptides, adopting different conformations within different complexes. The sequence simplicity and structural diversity of the arginine-rich motif has made it a good framework for constructing combinatorial libraries and identifying novel RNA-binding peptides, including those targeted to the HIV Rev response element (RRE). Here we describe a modified transcription antitermination reporter assay engineered with kanamycin resistance that enables larger in vivo screens (approximately 10(9) sequences) than previously possible. We show that the assay detects only specific RNA-protein complexes, and that binders are enriched at least 300-fold per round of selection. We screened a large peptide library in which amino acids with charged, polar, and small side chains were randomly distributed within a polyarginine framework and identified a set of high affinity RRE-binding peptides. Most contain glutamine at one particular peptide position, and the best peptides display significantly higher antitermination activities than Rev or other previously described high-affinity RRE-binding peptides. The kanamycin antitermination (KAN) assay should be useful for screening relatively large libraries and thereby facilitate identification of novel RNA binders.

Citing Articles

A translational repression reporter assay for the analysis of RNA-binding protein consensus sites.

Nowacki J, Malenica M, Schmeing S, Schiller D, Buchmuller B, Amrahova G RNA Biol. 2023; 20(1):85-94.

PMID: 36946649 PMC: 10038052. DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2023.2192553.


Identification of antisense RNA stem-loops that inhibit RNA-protein interactions using a bacterial reporter system.

Yano A, Horiya S, Minami T, Haneda E, Ikeda M, Harada K Nucleic Acids Res. 2010; 38(10):3489-501.

PMID: 20156995 PMC: 2879510. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkq027.


Thermodynamic profiling of HIV RREIIB RNA-zinc finger interactions.

Mishra S, Spring A, Germann M J Mol Biol. 2009; 393(2):369-82.

PMID: 19646998 PMC: 2757539. DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2009.07.066.


Evolvability of the mode of peptide binding by an RNA.

Iwazaki T, Li X, Harada K RNA. 2005; 11(9):1364-73.

PMID: 16043495 PMC: 1370820. DOI: 10.1261/rna.2560905.

References
1.
Harada K, Martin S, Frankel A . Selection of RNA-binding peptides in vivo. Nature. 1996; 380(6570):175-9. DOI: 10.1038/380175a0. View

2.
Landt S, Tan R, Frankel A . Screening RNA-binding libraries using Tat-fusion system in mammalian cells. Methods Enzymol. 2000; 318:350-63. DOI: 10.1016/s0076-6879(00)18062-0. View

3.
Franklin N . Clustered arginine residues of bacteriophage lambda N protein are essential to antitermination of transcription, but their locale cannot compensate for boxB loop defects. J Mol Biol. 1993; 231(2):343-60. DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1993.1287. View

4.
Pollard V, Malim M . The HIV-1 Rev protein. Annu Rev Microbiol. 1999; 52:491-532. DOI: 10.1146/annurev.micro.52.1.491. View

5.
McColl D, Honchell C, Frankel A . Structure-based design of an RNA-binding zinc finger. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999; 96(17):9521-6. PMC: 22241. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.17.9521. View