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Riboswitch

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A 3D representation of the lysine riboswitch

In molecular biology, a riboswitch is a regulatory segment of a messenger RNA molecule that binds a small molecule, resulting in a change in production of the proteins encoded by the mRNA.[1][2][3][4] Thus, an mRNA that contains a riboswitch is directly involved in regulating its own activity, in response to the concentrations of its effector molecule. The discovery that modern organisms use RNA to bind small molecules, and discriminate against closely related analogs, expanded the known natural capabilities of RNA beyond its ability to code for proteins, catalyze reactions, or to bind other RNA or protein macromolecules.

The original definition of the term "riboswitch" specified that they directly sense small-molecule metabolite concentrations.[5] Although this definition remains in common use, some biologists have used a broader definition that includes other cis-regulatory RNAs. However, this article will discuss only metabolite-binding riboswitches.

Most known riboswitches occur in bacteria, but functional riboswitches of one type (the TPP riboswitch) have been discovered in archaea, plants and certain fungi. TPP riboswitches have also been predicted in archaea,[6] but have not been experimentally tested.

History and discovery

Prior to the discovery of riboswitches, the mechanism by which some genes involved in multiple metabolic pathways were regulated remained mysterious. Accumulating evidence increasingly suggested the then-unprecedented idea that the mRNAs involved might bind metabolites directly, to affect their own regulation. These data included conserved RNA secondary structures often found in the untranslated regions (UTRs) of the relevant genes and the success of procedures to create artificial small molecule-binding RNAs called aptamers.[7][8][9][10][11] In 2002, the first comprehensive proofs of multiple classes of riboswitches were published, including protein-free binding assays, and metabolite-binding riboswitches were established as a new mechanism of gene regulation.[5][12][13][14]

Many of the earliest riboswitches to be discovered corresponded to conserved sequence "motifs" (patterns) in 5' UTRs that appeared to correspond to a structured RNA. For example, comparative analysis of upstream regions of several genes expected to be co-regulated led to the description of the S-box[15] (now the SAM-I riboswitch), the THI-box[9] (a region within the TPP riboswitch), the RFN element[8] (now the FMN riboswitch) and the B12-box[16] (a part of the cobalamin riboswitch), and in some cases experimental demonstrations that they were involved in gene regulation via an unknown mechanism. Bioinformatics has played a role in more recent discoveries, with increasing automation of the basic comparative genomics strategy. Barrick et al. (2004)[17] used BLAST to find UTRs homologous to all UTRs in Bacillus subtilis. Some of these homologous sets were inspected for conserved structure, resulting in 10 RNA-like motifs. Three of these were later experimentally confirmed as the glmS, glycine and PreQ1-I riboswitches (see below). Subsequent comparative genomics efforts using additional taxa of bacteria and improved computer algorithms have identified further riboswitches that are experimentally confirmed, as well as conserved RNA structures that are hypothesized to function as riboswitches.[18][19][20]

Mechanisms

Riboswitches are often conceptually divided into two parts: an aptamer and an expression platform. The aptamer directly binds the small molecule, and the expression platform undergoes structural changes in response to the changes in the aptamer. The expression platform is what regulates gene expression.

Expression platforms typically turn off gene expression in response to the small molecule, but some turn it on. The following riboswitch mechanisms have been experimentally demonstrated.

  • Riboswitch-controlled formation of rho-independent transcription termination hairpins leads to premature transcription termination.
  • Riboswitch-mediated folding sequesters the ribosome-binding site, thereby inhibiting translation.
  • The riboswitch is a ribozyme that cleaves itself in the presence of sufficient concentrations of its metabolite.
  • Riboswitch alternate structures affect the splicing of the pre-mRNA.
    • A TPP riboswitch in Neurospora crassa (a fungus) controls alternative splicing to conditionally produce an Upstream Open Reading Frame (uORF), thereby affecting the expression of downstream genes[21]
    • A TPP riboswitch in plants modifies splicing and alternative 3'-end processing[22][23]
  • A riboswitch in Clostridium acetobutylicum regulates an adjacent gene that is not part of the same mRNA transcript. In this regulation, the riboswitch interferes with transcription of the gene. The mechanism is uncertain but may be caused by clashes between two RNA polymerase units as they simultaneously transcribe the same DNA.[24]
  • A riboswitch in Listeria monocytogenes regulates the expression of its downstream gene. However, riboswitch transcripts subsequently modulate the expression of a gene located elsewhere in the genome.[25] This trans regulation occurs via base-pairing to the mRNA of the distal gene. As the temperature of the bacterium increases, the riboswitch melts, allowing transcription. Unpublished undergraduate research created a similar riboswitch or 'thermosensor' via random mutagenesis of the Listeria monocytogenes sequence.[26]

Types

Secondary structure of a purine riboswitch from Bacillus subtilis

The following is a list of experimentally validated riboswitches, organized by ligand.

Presumed riboswitches:

  • Moco RNA motif is presumed to bind molybdenum cofactor, to regulate genes involved in biosynthesis and transport of this coenzyme, as well as enzymes that use it or its derivatives as a cofactor.

Candidate metabolite-binding riboswitches have been identified using bioinformatics, and have moderately complex secondary structures and several highly conserved nucleotide positions, as these features are typical of riboswitches that must specifically bind a small molecule. Riboswitch candidates are also consistently located in the 5' UTRs of protein-coding genes, and these genes are suggestive of metabolite binding, as these are also features of most known riboswitches. Hypothesized riboswitch candidates highly consistent with the preceding criteria are as follows: crcB RNA Motif, manA RNA motif, pfl RNA motif, ydaO/yuaA leader, yjdF RNA motif, ykkC-yxkD leader (and related ykkC-III RNA motif) and the yybP-ykoY leader. The functions of these hypothetical riboswitches remain unknown.

Computational models

Riboswitches have been also investigated using in-silico approaches.[29][30][31] In particular, solutions for riboswitch prediction can be divided into two wide categories:

  • riboswitch gene finders, i.e. systems aimed at uncovering riboswitches by genomic inspections, mostly based on motif-searching mechanisms. This group contains Infernal, the founding component of the Rfam database,[32] and more specific tools such as RibEx[33] or RiboSW.[34]
  • conformational switch predictors, i.e. methods based on a structural classification of alternative structures, such as paRNAss,[35] RNAshapes[36] and RNAbor.[37] Moreover, family-specific approaches for ON/OFF structure prediction have been proposed as well.[38]

The SwiSpot tool[39] somehow covers both the groups, as it uses conformational predictions to assess the presence of riboswitches.

The RNA world hypothesis

Riboswitches demonstrate that naturally occurring RNA can bind small molecules specifically, a capability that many previously believed was the domain of proteins or artificially constructed RNAs called aptamers. The existence of riboswitches in all domains of life therefore adds some support to the RNA world hypothesis, which holds that life originally existed using only RNA, and proteins came later; this hypothesis requires that all critical functions performed by proteins (including small molecule binding) could be performed by RNA. It has been suggested that some riboswitches might represent ancient regulatory systems, or even remnants of RNA-world ribozymes whose bindings domains are conserved.[13][18][40]

As antibiotic targets

Riboswitches could be a target for novel antibiotics. Indeed, some antibiotics whose mechanism of action was unknown for decades have been shown to operate by targeting riboswitches.[41] For example, when the antibiotic pyrithiamine enters the cell, it is metabolized into pyrithiamine pyrophosphate. Pyrithiamine pyrophosphate has been shown to bind and activate the TPP riboswitch, causing the cell to cease the synthesis and import of TPP. Because pyrithiamine pyrophosphate does not substitute for TPP as a coenzyme, the cell dies.

Engineered riboswitches

Since riboswitches are an effective method of controlling gene expression in natural organisms, there has been interest in engineering artificial riboswitches[42][43][44] for industrial and medical applications such as gene therapy.[45][46]

References

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Further reading

  • Ferré-D'Amaré, Adrian R.; Winkler, Wade C. (2011). "Chapter 5. The Roles of Metal Ions in Regulation by Riboswitches". In Astrid Sigel, Helmut Sigel and Roland K. O. Sigel (ed.). Structural and catalytic roles of metal ions in RNA. Metal Ions in Life Sciences. Vol. 9. Cambridge, U.K.: RSC Publishing. pp. 141–173. doi:10.1039/9781849732512-00141. ISBN 978-1-84973-094-5. PMC 3454353. PMID 22010271.