PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

RNA folding and catalysis mediated by iron (II).

  • Shreyas S Athavale,
  • Anton S Petrov,
  • Chiaolong Hsiao,
  • Derrick Watkins,
  • Caitlin D Prickett,
  • J Jared Gossett,
  • Lively Lie,
  • Jessica C Bowman,
  • Eric O'Neill,
  • Chad R Bernier,
  • Nicholas V Hud,
  • Roger M Wartell,
  • Stephen C Harvey,
  • Loren Dean Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 5
p. e38024

Abstract

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Mg²⁺ shares a distinctive relationship with RNA, playing important and specific roles in the folding and function of essentially all large RNAs. Here we use theory and experiment to evaluate Fe²⁺ in the absence of free oxygen as a replacement for Mg²⁺ in RNA folding and catalysis. We describe both quantum mechanical calculations and experiments that suggest that the roles of Mg²⁺ in RNA folding and function can indeed be served by Fe²⁺. The results of quantum mechanical calculations show that the geometry of coordination of Fe²⁺ by RNA phosphates is similar to that of Mg²⁺. Chemical footprinting experiments suggest that the conformation of the Tetrahymena thermophila Group I intron P4-P6 domain RNA is conserved between complexes with Fe²⁺ or Mg²⁺. The catalytic activities of both the L1 ribozyme ligase, obtained previously by in vitro selection in the presence of Mg²⁺, and the hammerhead ribozyme are enhanced in the presence of Fe²⁺ compared to Mg²⁺. All chemical footprinting and ribozyme assays in the presence of Fe²⁺ were performed under anaerobic conditions. The primary motivation of this work is to understand RNA in plausible early earth conditions. Life originated during the early Archean Eon, characterized by a non-oxidative atmosphere and abundant soluble Fe²⁺. The combined biochemical and paleogeological data are consistent with a role for Fe²⁺ in an RNA World. RNA and Fe²⁺ could, in principle, support an array of RNA structures and catalytic functions more diverse than RNA with Mg²⁺ alone.