We determined the solution structure of two 27-nt RNA
hairpins and their complexes with cobalt(III)-hexammine (Co(NH3)63+) by NMR spectroscopy.
The RNA hairpins used in this study are the P4 region from
Escherichia coli RNase P RNA and a C-to-U mutant that
confers altered divalent metal-ion specificity (Ca2+
replaces Mg2+) for catalytic activity of this ribozyme.
Co(NH3)63+ is a useful spectroscopic
probe for Mg(H2O)62+-binding sites
because both complexes have octahedral symmetry and have similar radii.
The thermodynamics of binding to both RNA hairpins was studied using
chemical shift changes upon titration with Mg2+, Ca2+,
and Co(NH3)63+. We found that the
equilibrium binding constants for each of the metal ions was essentially
unchanged when the P4 model RNA hairpin was mutated, although the NMR
structures show that the RNA hairpins adopt different conformations. In
the C-to-U mutant a C[bull ]G base pair is replaced by U[bull ]G, and the
conserved bulged uridine in the P4 wild-type stem shifts in the 3′
direction by 1 nt. Intermolecular NOE cross-peaks between
Co(NH3)63+ and RNA protons were used to
locate the site of Co(NH3)63+ binding to
both RNA hairpins. The metal ion binds in the major groove near a bulge
loop, but is shifted 5′ by more than 1 bp in the mutant. The change
of the metal-ion binding site provides a possible explanation for changes
in catalytic activity of the mutant RNase P in the presence of
Ca2+.