Poly(C) Binding Protein Binding Affinity and Specificity for C-rich Oligonucleotides Christopher Szeto 10.4225/03/58c9e86e9f93c https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Poly_C_Binding_Protein_Binding_Affinity_and_Specificity_for_C-rich_Oligonucleotides/4757125 Poly(C) Binding Proteins (PCBPs) are RNA-binding proteins that interact with pre-mRNAs and mRNAs for the purpose of regulating post-transcriptional events. PCBPs have high affinity and specificity for poly-cytosine in single stranded deoxyribonucleic acid (ssDNA) and single stranded ribonucleic acid (ssRNA). This allows PCBPs to interact with C-rich RNA sequences to achieve functions such as pre-mRNA splicing, mRNA stability and mRNA translational activation and silencing. Additionally, PCBPs have also been revealed to be hijacked from host cell function to aid in viral protein translation and the replication of positive-strand picornaviruses such as the poliovirus. <br>     <br>    PCBPs consist of three hnRNP K (KH) domains that work in tandem to recognise and bind to C-rich RNA structures. The way in which full length PCBPs engage RNA structures would enable the understanding of protein-oligonucleotide complexes formed during processes of post-transcriptional regulation. However, structures of multi-KH domain PCBPs in complex with oligonucleotide have never been solved. Instead, single PCBP KH1 domains have been solved in complex with oligonucleotide. Three solved structures revealed that the KH domain consists of a hydrophobic core with a number of charged amino acids at the site of the nucleotide binding groove that can accommodate up to 4 nucleotide bases. Each of these structures shows that KH1 recognises a different tetra-nucleotide motif (ACCC, CCCT and CCCC). These structures are unable to explain the molecular basis for nucleotide recognition at the 1<sup>st</sup> and 4<sup>th</sup> positions of the tetra-nucleotide motif. <br>     <br>    Binding studies using Surface Plasmon Resonance and Fluorescence Anisotropy (FA) were used to show that KH1 bound to the CCCC motif with the highest affinity; and was 2-fold higher than the CCCT motif and 4-fold higher than ACCC. This suggested that preferential binding for cytosine exists at the 1<sup>st</sup> and/or 4<sup>th</sup> positions. Using Molecular Dynamics (MD), each of the KH1-oligonucleotide complexes were modelled <i>in silico</i> to predict the interactions that might contribute to binding affinity and specificity for cytosine. My <i>in silico</i> investigations predicted 4 amino acids: D82, R57, R40 and E51 (at the 1<sup>st</sup>, 2<sup>nd</sup>, 3<sup>rd</sup> and 4<sup>th</sup> positions respectively). This was followed up experimentally by mutating each of these residues to alanine using site-directed mutagenesis. Their binding affinities were measured using FA and results revealed that D82 does not contribute to binding affinity or specificity for cytosine at the 1st position. However, the residues R57, R40 and E51 are responsible for KH1’s recognition of cytosine triplets at the 2<sup>nd</sup>, 3<sup>rd</sup> and 4<sup>th</sup> nucleotide binding positions. <br>     <br>    Although KH1 interactions that underlie affinity and specificity for C-rich DNA were established, the ways in which full length PCBPs bind to target RNAs were still unclear. Using binding and structural studies, it was discovered that the KH2 domain, by itself, possesses extremely weak binding affinity to C-rich DNA; however, when together in a construct with KH1, it is able to support the KH1 domain in binding C-rich DNA in a synergistic manner. These results suggest that an ordered arrangement of KH domains may exist. Crystals of KH1-KH2 proteins were successfully prepared; however, did not diffract at high enough resolution for structural determination. Together, these studies provide a framework for further structural studies to uncover the way full length PCBPs bind to biologically relevant RNA targets. 2017-03-16 01:20:43 RNA-binding proteins PolyC binding protein Protein-oligonucleotide binding Fluorescence Anisotropy Surface Plasmon Resonance Binding affinity