Publication | Closed Access
Three-Dimensional Structure of Yeast Phenylalanine Transfer RNA: Folding of the Polynucleotide Chain
417
Citations
7
References
1973
Year
Electron DensityElectron Dense MassesBiochemistryProtein AssemblyProtein FoldingPolynucleotide ChainThree-dimensional StructureNatural SciencesStructural BioinformaticsMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationOligonucleotideRna Structure PredictionMedicineStructural BiologyCloverleaf Conformation
At 4 A resolution the polynucleotides in yeast phenylalanine transfer RNA are seen in a series of electron dense masses about 5.8 A apart. These peaks are probably associated with the phosphate groups, while lower levels of electron density between segments of adjacent polynucleotide chains are interpreted as arising from hydrogen-bonded purine-pyrimidine base pairs. It is possible to trace the entire polynucleotide chain with only two minor regions of ambiguity. The polynucleotide chain has a secondary structure consistent with the cloverleaf conformation; however, its folding is different from that proposed in any model. The molecule is made of two double-stranded helical regions oriented at right angles to each other in the shape of an L. One end of the L has the CCA acceptor; the anticodon loop is at the other end, and the dihydrouridine and TpsiC loops form the corner.
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