» Articles » PMID: 33483368

The Emerging Structural Complexity of G-quadruplex RNAs

Overview
Journal RNA
Specialty Molecular Biology
Date 2021 Jan 23
PMID 33483368
Citations 39
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

G-quadruplexes (G4s) are four-stranded nucleic acid structures that arise from the stacking of G-quartets, cyclic arrangements of four guanines engaged in Hoogsteen base-pairing. Until recently, most RNA G4 structures were thought to conform to a sequence pattern in which guanines stacking within the G4 would also be contiguous in sequence (e.g., four successive guanine trinucleotide tracts separated by loop nucleotides). Such a sequence restriction, and the stereochemical constraints inherent to RNA (arising, in particular, from the presence of the 2'-OH), dictate relatively simple RNA G4 structures. Recent crystallographic and solution NMR structure determinations of a number of in vitro selected RNA aptamers have revealed RNA G4 structures of unprecedented complexity. Structures of the aptamer that binds an RGG peptide from the Fragile-X mental retardation protein, various fluorescence turn-on aptamers (Corn, Mango, and Spinach), and the spiegelmer that binds the complement protein C5a, in particular, reveal complexity hitherto unsuspected in RNA G4s, including nucleotides in conformation, locally inverted strand polarity, and nucleotide quartets that are not all-G. Common to these new structures, the sequences folding into G4s do not conform to the requirement that guanine stacks arise from consecutive (contiguous in sequence) nucleotides. This review highlights how emancipation from this constraint drastically expands the structural possibilities of RNA G-quadruplexes.

Citing Articles

Small molecules reveal differential shifts in stability and protein binding for G-quadruplex RNA.

Martyr J, Zafferani M, Bailey M, Zorawski M, Montalvan N, Muralidharan D bioRxiv. 2025; .

PMID: 39990451 PMC: 11844376. DOI: 10.1101/2025.02.10.637408.


5'-UTR G-Quadruplex-Mediated Translation Regulation in Eukaryotes: Current Understanding and Methodological Challenges.

Kamzeeva P, Alferova V, Korshun V, Varizhuk A, Aralov A Int J Mol Sci. 2025; 26(3).

PMID: 39940956 PMC: 11818886. DOI: 10.3390/ijms26031187.


SERBP1 interacts with PARP1 and is present in PARylation-dependent protein complexes regulating splicing, cell division, and ribosome biogenesis.

Breunig K, Lei X, Montalbano M, Guardia G, Ostadrahimi S, Alers V Elife. 2025; 13.

PMID: 39937575 PMC: 11820137. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.98152.


Expanding Cas12a Activity Control with an RNA G-Quadruplex at the 5' end of CRISPR RNA.

Huang W, Wang J, Wang C, Liu Y, Li W, Chen Q Adv Sci (Weinh). 2024; 12(7):e2411305.

PMID: 39721016 PMC: 11831528. DOI: 10.1002/advs.202411305.


RNA tertiary structure and conformational dynamics revealed by BASH MaP.

Oleynikov M, Jaffrey S Elife. 2024; 13.

PMID: 39625751 PMC: 11614387. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.98540.


References
1.
Phan A, Kuryavyi V, Darnell J, Serganov A, Majumdar A, Ilin S . Structure-function studies of FMRP RGG peptide recognition of an RNA duplex-quadruplex junction. Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2011; 18(7):796-804. PMC: 3130835. DOI: 10.1038/nsmb.2064. View

2.
Jhunjhunwala A, Ali Z, Bhattacharya S, Halder A, Mitra A, Sharma P . On the Nature of Nucleobase Stacking in RNA: A Comprehensive Survey of Its Structural Variability and a Systematic Classification of Associated Interactions. J Chem Inf Model. 2021; 61(3):1470-1480. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c01225. View

3.
Ramos A, Hollingworth D, Pastore A . G-quartet-dependent recognition between the FMRP RGG box and RNA. RNA. 2003; 9(10):1198-207. PMC: 1370484. DOI: 10.1261/rna.5960503. View

4.
Autour A, Jeng S, Cawte A, Abdolahzadeh A, Galli A, Panchapakesan S . Fluorogenic RNA Mango aptamers for imaging small non-coding RNAs in mammalian cells. Nat Commun. 2018; 9(1):656. PMC: 5811451. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-02993-8. View

5.
Lightfoot H, Hagen T, Tatum N, Hall J . The diverse structural landscape of quadruplexes. FEBS Lett. 2019; 593(16):2083-2102. DOI: 10.1002/1873-3468.13547. View