By chemical and enzymatic probing, we have analyzed the
secondary structure of rodent BC1 RNA, a small brain-specific
non-messenger RNA. BC1 RNA is specifically transported
into dendrites of neuronal cells, where it is proposed
to play a role in regulation of translation near synapses.
In this study we demonstrate that the 5′ domain of
BC1 RNA, derived from tRNAAla, does not fold into
the predicted canonical tRNA cloverleaf structure. We present
evidence that by changing bases within the tRNAAla
domain during the course of evolution, an extended stem-loop
structure has been created in BC1 RNA. The new structural
domain might function, in part, as a putative binding site
for protein(s) involved in dendritic transport of BC1 RNA
within neurons. Furthermore, BC1 RNA contains, in addition
to the extended stem-loop structure, an internal poly(A)-rich
region that is supposedly single stranded, followed by
a second smaller stem-loop structure at the 3′ end
of the RNA. The three distinct structural domains reflect
evolutionary legacies of BC1 RNA.