Solid-state nanopore sensing reveals conformational changes induced by a mutation in a neuron-specific tRNA Arg

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Abstract

We demonstrate that solid-state nanopore sensing is a powerful single-molecule method for analyzing RNA conformational ensembles. As a model, we employed n-Tr20, a neuron-specific cytoplasmic tRNA Arg UCU , whose C50U mutation is associated with neurodegeneration in C57BL/6J mice. Maturation of the Tr20 C50U precursor is impaired as the mutation stabilizes a conformational ensemble different from the wildtype. To gain insights into how this mutation engenders structural differences, we used solid-state nanopore sensing for the real-time identification of metastable conformers that are not easily observable by ensemble methods. Ion-current traces recorded using an 8-nm nanopore revealed broad contours of the conformational landscape of n-Tr20/n-Tr20 C50U ± Mg 2+ . Additionally, small-angle X-ray scattering studies and cryo-EM analysis revealed structural plasticity even more than predicted from the nanopore-sensing data. Since dynamics undergird RNA (dys)function in cellular physiology and pathology, nanopore sensing to determine RNA conformational sampling is a valuable addition to the growing RNA structural analysis toolkit.

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