RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Reverse Watson-Crick purine-purine base pairs — the Sharp-turn motif and other structural consequences in functional RNAs JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 098723 DO 10.1101/098723 A1 Abhinav Mittal A1 Antarip Halder A1 Sohini Bhattacharya A1 Dhananjay Bhattacharyya A1 Abhijit Mitra YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/01/06/098723.abstract AB Identification of static and/or dynamic roles of different noncanonical base pairs is essential for a comprehensive understanding of the sequence-structure-function space of RNA. In this context, reverse Watson-Crick purine-purine base pairs (A:A, G:G&A:GW:W Trans) constitute an interesting class of noncanonical base pairs in RNA due to their characteristic C1′–C1′ distance (highest among all base pairing geometries) and parallel local strand orientation. Structural alignment of the RNA stretches containing these W:W Trans base pairs with their corresponding homologous sites in a non-redundant set of RNA crystal structures show that, as expected, these base pairs are associated with specific structural folds or functional roles. Detailed analysis of these contexts further revealed a bimodal distribution in the local backbone geometry parameters associated with these base pairs. One mode, populated by both A:A and G:G W:W Trans pairs, manifests itself as a characteristic backbone fold. We call this fold a ‘Sharp-turn’ motif. The other mode is exclusively associated with A:A W:W Trans pairs involved in mediating higher order interactions. The same trend is also observed in available solution NMR structures. We have also characterized the importance of recurrent hydrogen bonding interactions between adenine and guanine in W:W Trans geometry. Quantum chemical calculations performed at M05-2X/6-31++(2d,2p) level explain how the characteristic electronic properties of these W:W Trans base pairs facilitate their occurrence in such exclusive structural folds that are important for RNA functionalities.