Single-molecule FRET-Rosetta reveals RNA structural rearrangements during human telomerase catalysis

  1. Michael D. Stone1,2
  1. 1Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
  2. 2Center for Molecular Biology of RNA, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
  3. 3Biophysics Program, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA
  4. 4Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA
  5. 5Department of Physics, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA
  1. Corresponding authors: mds{at}ucsc.edu, rhiju{at}stanford.edu
  1. 6These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Maintenance of telomeres by telomerase permits continuous proliferation of rapidly dividing cells, including the majority of human cancers. Despite its direct biomedical significance, the architecture of the human telomerase complex remains unknown. Generating homogeneous telomerase samples has presented a significant barrier to developing improved structural models. Here we pair single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (smFRET) measurements with Rosetta modeling to map the conformations of the essential telomerase RNA core domain within the active ribonucleoprotein. FRET-guided modeling places the essential pseudoknot fold distal to the active site on a protein surface comprising the C-terminal element, a domain that shares structural homology with canonical polymerase thumb domains. An independently solved medium-resolution structure of Tetrahymena telomerase provides a blind test of our modeling methodology and sheds light on the structural homology of this domain across diverse organisms. Our smFRET-Rosetta models reveal nanometer-scale rearrangements within the RNA core domain during catalysis. Taken together, our FRET data and pseudoatomic molecular models permit us to propose a possible mechanism for how RNA core domain rearrangement is coupled to template hybrid elongation.

Keywords

  • Received August 15, 2016.
  • Accepted September 23, 2016.

This article is distributed exclusively by the RNA Society for the first 12 months after the full-issue publication date (see http://rnajournal.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After 12 months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

| Table of Contents