Riboswitch Diversity and Distribution
Overview
Affiliations
Riboswitches are commonly used by bacteria to detect a variety of metabolites and ions to regulate gene expression. To date, nearly 40 different classes of riboswitches have been discovered, experimentally validated, and modeled at atomic resolution in complex with their cognate ligands. The research findings produced since the first riboswitch validation reports in 2002 reveal that these noncoding RNA domains exploit many different structural features to create binding pockets that are extremely selective for their target ligands. Some riboswitch classes are very common and are present in bacteria from nearly all lineages, whereas others are exceedingly rare and appear in only a few species whose DNA has been sequenced. Presented herein are the consensus sequences, structural models, and phylogenetic distributions for all validated riboswitch classes. Based on our findings, we predict that there are potentially many thousands of distinct bacterial riboswitch classes remaining to be discovered, but that the rarity of individual undiscovered classes will make it increasingly difficult to find additional examples of this RNA-based sensory and gene control mechanism.
Systematic analysis of cotranscriptional RNA folding using transcription elongation complex display.
Kelly S, Strobel E Nat Commun. 2025; 16(1):2350.
PMID: 40064876 PMC: 11894091. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-57415-3.
Designing small molecules that target a cryptic RNA binding site via base displacement.
Batey R, Olenginski L, Wierzba A, Laursen S Res Sq. 2025; .
PMID: 39975918 PMC: 11838749. DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-5836924/v1.
- Simplifying the Complex: Building, Simulating, and Analyzing Protein-Ligand Systems in .
Talagayev V, Chen Y, Doering N, Obendorf L, Denzinger K, Puls K J Chem Inf Model. 2025; 65(4):1967-1978.
PMID: 39933881 PMC: 11863370. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.4c02158.
Synthetic Dual-Input Hybrid Riboswitches─Optimized Genetic Regulators in Yeast.
Kelvin D, Arias Rodriguez J, Groher A, Petras K, Suess B ACS Synth Biol. 2025; 14(2):497-509.
PMID: 39902969 PMC: 11854369. DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.4c00660.
Mok K, Hallberg Z, Procknow R, Taga M J Bacteriol. 2025; 207(2):e0028424.
PMID: 39873498 PMC: 11841063. DOI: 10.1128/jb.00284-24.