Four-way helical junctions are found widely in
natural RNA species. In this study, we have studied the
conformation of two junctions by fluorescence resonance
energy transfer. We show that the junctions are folded
by pairwise coaxial helical stacking, forming one predominant
stacking conformer in both examples studied. At low magnesium
ion concentrations, the helical axes of both junctions
are approximately perpendicular. One junction undergoes
a rotation into a distorted antiparallel structure induced
by the binding of a single magnesium ion. By contrast,
the axes of the four-way junction of the U1 snRNA remain
approximately perpendicular under all conditions examined,
and we have determined the stacking conformer adopted.