Publication | Closed Access
Structural Basis for Double-Stranded RNA Processing by Dicer
948
Citations
32
References
2006
Year
Rna ProcessingEngineeringRna Structure PredictionSpecialized Ribonuclease DicerRna BiologyDna ReplicationMolecular BiologyStructural BasisSmall RnaPaz DomainSystems BiologyMedicineIntact Dicer EnzymeStructural BiologyNon-coding Rna
The specialized ribonuclease Dicer initiates RNA interference by cleaving double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) substrates into small fragments about 25 nucleotides in length. In the crystal structure of an intact Dicer enzyme, the PAZ domain, a module that binds the end of dsRNA, is separated from the two catalytic ribonuclease III (RNase III) domains by a flat, positively charged surface. The 65 angstrom distance between the PAZ and RNase III domains matches the length spanned by 25 base pairs of RNA. Thus, Dicer itself is a molecular ruler that recognizes dsRNA and cleaves a specified distance from the helical end.
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