Nucleic Acids Research, 1983, Vol. 11, No. 17 5989-6001
© 1983
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY |
Effect of 2'-O-methylation on the structure of mammalian 5.8S rRNAs and the 5.8S28S rRNA junction
1Department of Botany and Genetics, University of Guelph Guelph NIG 2W1, Canada 2Department of Chemical Sciences, Old Dominion University Norfolk, VA 23508, USA
Received June 1, 1983. Accepted August 11, 1983.
The mammalian 5.8S rRNA contains a partially 2'-0-methylated uridylic acid residue at position 14 which is largely or entirely methylated in the cytoplasm (Nazar, R.N., Sitz, T.O. and Sommers, K.D. (1980) J. Mol. Biol. 142, 117121). The effect of this methylation on the 5.8S RNA structure and 5.828S rRNA junction was investigated using both chemical and physical approaches. Electrophoretic studies indicated that the free 5.8S rRNA can take on at least two different conformations and that the 2'-0-methylation at U14 restricts the molecule to the more hydrodynamically open form. Structural studies using limited pancreatic or T1 ribonuclease digestion indicated that the methylated conformation was more susceptible to digestion, consistent with a more open tertiary structure. Modification-exclusion studies indicated that the first 29 nucleotides at the 5' end and residues 140 through 158 at the 3' end affect the 5.8S28S rRNA interaction, supporting previous suggestions that the 5.8S RNA interacts with its cognate high molecular weight component through its termini. These results also suggested that the 2'-0-methylated uridylic acid residue plays a role in the 5.8S28S rRNA interaction and thermal denaturation studies confirmed this by showing that methylation destabilizes the 5.8S28S rRNA junction. The 5.828S rRNA interaction appears to be more complex than previously believed.
1Present Address: Institut de Chimie Biologique, Faculté de Medicine de Strasbourg, 67085 Strasbourg, Cedex, France