Selective Strand Annealing and Selective Strand Exchange Promoted by the N-terminal Domain of Hepatitis Delta Antigen*

Zhi-Shun Huang, Wen-Huey Su, Jui-Ling Wang, and Huey-Nan WuDagger

From the Institute of Molecular Biology, Academia Sinica, Taipei 11529, Taiwan, Republic of China

Received for publication, August 5, 2002, and in revised form, November 22, 2002

    ABSTRACT
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

We have previously shown that the N-terminal domain of hepatitis delta virus (NdAg) has an RNA chaperone activity in vitro (Huang, Z. S., and Wu, H. N. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 26455-26461). Here we investigate further the basis of the stimulatory effect of NdAg on RNA structural rearrangement: mainly the formation and breakage of base pairs. Duplex dissociation, strand annealing, and exchange of complementary RNA oligonucleotides; the hybridization of yeast U4 and U6 small nuclear RNAs and of hammerhead ribozymes and cognate substrates; and the cis-cleavage reaction of hepatitis delta ribozymes were used to determine directly the role of NdAg in RNA-mediated processes. The results showed that NdAg could accelerate the annealing of complementary sequences in a selective fashion and promote strand exchange for the formation of a more extended duplex. These activities would prohibit NdAg from modifying the structure of a stable RNA, but allow NdAg to facilitate a trans-acting hammerhead ribozyme to find a more extensively matched target in cognate substrate. These and other results suggest that hepatitis delta antigen may have a biological role as an RNA chaperone, modulating the folding of viral RNA for replication and transcription.

    INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Hepatitis delta virus (HDV)1 is a satellite virus of hepatitis B virus. The genome of HDV comprises single-stranded circular RNA of ~1700 nucleotides, and HDV RNA replicates through a symmetrical rolling circle mechanism (1). Hepatitis delta antigen is the only protein coded by HDV that is critical for viral replication (2) and virion assembly (3), although the molecular mechanisms have not yet been elucidated. HDV RNA, of both genomic and antigenomic senses, contains a ribozyme domain that can adopt a pseudoknot-like structure and undergo cis-cleavage in vitro (4-7). The cis-cleaving activity is essential for generating monomeric size RNA molecules during viral replication (8, 9). Hepatitis delta antigen may enhance, although it is not required for, the processing of multimeric size HDV RNA in vivo (10). Conceivably, hepatitis delta antigen by itself, or together with unidentified cellular factors, acts as an RNA chaperone that modulates the ribozyme activity of HDV RNA.

RNA chaperones are defined as proteins that aid in the folding of RNA by preventing misfolding or by resolving misfolded structures (11). The RNA chaperone activities in vitro of several proteins that interact with RNA with broad specificity have been explored through their effect on ribozyme reactions. These proteins, including several Escherichia coli ribosomal proteins (12), the C-terminal domain of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 protein (13), and the nucleocapsid protein of human immunodeficiency virus (14, 15), can overcome the general limitations of ribozyme reactions and facilitate ribozyme catalysis. Proteins with RNA chaperone activity are thought to lower the activation energy necessary for breaking and reforming of base pairs, although the molecular mechanism underlying RNA chaperone activity is not known.

In vitro, hepatitis delta antigen can modulate the cis-cleaving activities of HDV genomic RNA fragments and facilitate a trans-acting hammerhead ribozyme to find its target in RNAs of various sequences and lengths (16). Hepatitis delta antigen exerts its effect on these RNA-mediated processes by modifying the conformation of RNA molecules and by promoting strand annealing and strand dissociation. These properties of hepatitis delta antigen parallel many cellular proteins and viral proteins with RNA/nucleic acid chaperone activity (12-15). The functional domain of hepatitis delta antigen appears to locate at the N-terminal region that is rich in basic amino acids and contains the cryptic RNA binding domain, coiled-coil domain, and nuclear localization signal (16). The core of the functional domain overlaps with the coiled-coil domain, whereas the RNA binding domain that binds HDV RNA specifically is not required for the RNA chaperone activity (16).

Here we investigated further the basis of the stimulatory effect of the N-terminal domain of hepatitis delta antigen, named as NdAg, on RNA structural rearrangement. The results confirm and extend our previous model. The results showed that NdAg could promote the annealing of a variety of complementary sequences and stabilize RNA duplexes. NdAg preferentially stimulated the formation of a more extended duplex among competing sequences by facilitating strand annealing and strand exchange in a selective fashion. Moreover, NdAg was able to facilitate a trans-acting hammerhead ribozyme to discriminate a completely matched from a non-completely matched target in a substrate RNA, but may not alter the structure of a stable RNA molecule. The selective strand annealing and selective strand exchange activity of NdAg may be important for modulating the folding of viral RNA for replication and transcription.

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Proteins-- The N-terminal region (residues 1-88) of hepatitis delta antigen, named as NdAg, was produced in E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells and purified by phosphocellulose column chromatography as described previously (16). Fractions containing NdAg were snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -70 °C. The concentration of NdAg was determined by ninhydrin assay with lysine as standard. NdAg was diluted to the desired concentrations with protein dilution buffer (50 mM Hepes-NaOH (pH 7.9), 1 M NaCl, 1 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), and 20% glycerol) and used as 10× stock. T4 phage gene 32 protein (T4gp32) and E. coli single-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB) were purchased from Amersham Biosciences.

Nucleic Acids-- RNA oligos 11, 14, 17, and 22 and DNA oligos A, B, and C were chemically synthesized. Short unlabeled nucleic acid oligos were used directly without purification. DNA oligos A and B were gel-purified. The concentration of each nucleic acid fragment was determined by its absorbance at 260 nm. Carrier-free 5' end-labeled RNA oligo 22 and DNA oligo C were made using [gamma -32P]ATP (Amersham Biosciences) and T4 polynucleotide kinase (New England Biolabs). These 5' end-labeled nucleic acid fragments were purified from polyacrylamide, 7 M urea gels, and their concentrations were calculated from the radioactivity of each fragment and the specific activity of [gamma -32P]ATP.

HH16 and HH163 RNAs were synthesized by T3 RNA polymerase (Promega) with synthetic DNAs as templates. HJ12L RNA, Rz1.H2 RNA, KSS3 RNA, yeast U4 and U6 snRNAs, and P9 RNA were run-off transcripts of the T7 RNA polymerase (Promega) with restriction enzyme-linearized plasmid DNA as templates. These RNAs were internally labeled by incorporating [alpha -32P]CTP to in vitro transcription reactions and then purified from polyacrylamide, 7 M urea gels. The concentration of labeled RNA was calculated from the radioactivity of RNA and the specific activity of CTP. The cellular RNA of E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells was isolated by TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen) following the instructions from the manufacturer. phi X174 virion ssDNA and phi X174 replication form dsDNA were purchased from New England Biolabs. Nucleic acid concentrations were determined according to their absorbance at 260 nm. All nucleic acids were resuspended in TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and 1 mM EDTA) and stored at -20 °C.

Strand Annealing/Hybrid Formation Assay-- Complementary RNA oligos, complementary DNA oligos, or U4 and U6 snRNAs were heated separately at 95 °C for 2 min, cooled to room temperature, and incubated at the reaction temperature for at least 5 min before use. In general, 10-µl reaction mixtures contained indicated amounts of nucleic acid fragments and NdAg or other protein in 1× reaction buffer (40 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 0.1 M NaCl, 0.02 mM EDTA, 2% glycerol). Reactions were performed at different temperatures; timings initiated by the addition of NdAg or other protein unless otherwise indicated. Reactions were terminated by transfer to ice, and the addition of 2 µl of ice-cold stop solution (50 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), 2.5% SDS, 25% glycerol, 0.01% xylene cyanol, and 0.01% bromphenol blue). Different nucleic acid species were resolved by electrophoresis through a native polyacrylamide gel in TBE buffer (89 mM Tris-HCl, 89 mM boric acid, and 1 mM EDTA) with or without 0.1% SDS at 4 °C. Gels were dried and examined by autoradiography.

Strand Exchange Assay-- The pre-annealed RNA duplex was made by mixing 0.5 µM 32P-labeled oligo 22 with 2 µM complement in TE buffer. The RNA solution was heated at 95 °C for 2 min, cooled slowly (~1 h) to room temperature, and stored at -20 °C until used. The 32P-labeled pre-annealed RNA duplex was diluted in TE buffer and mixed with or without a competing RNA oligo, in the presence or absence of NdAg in 10 µl of reaction buffer at room temperature. Timing was initiated upon the addition of NdAg, and the reaction was stopped by the addition of a 0.2 reaction volume of ice-cold stop solution. All of the reaction mixtures were kept on ice before analysis. Electrophoresis of the RNA samples and the subsequent data analysis were performed as described for the annealing assay.

Melting Temperature Determination-- Tubes containing the pre-annealed RNA duplex in 10 µl of reaction buffer were transferred to a PCR machine and incubated for 3 min at each indicated temperature. One tube was removed at 5 °C intervals through the temperature range indicated, and 2 µl of ice-cold stop solution was added immediately to terminate the reaction. All of the reaction mixtures were kept on ice before analysis. Electrophoresis of the RNA samples and the subsequent data analysis were performed as described for the annealing assay.

Ribozyme Reactions-- Hepatitis delta ribozymes HJ12L and Rz1.H2 were heated at 95 °C for 2 min, cooled to room temperature, and incubated at 37 °C for 5 min before use. RNA was pre-incubated with NdAg in 1× reaction buffer for 30 min at 37 °C, and the cis-cleavage reaction of HJ12L or Rz1.H2 was initiated by the addition of MgCl2 to a final concentration of 12 mM. The reaction was performed at 37 °C for various periods of time. Further cis-cleavage was inhibited by the addition of an equal volume of quench solution containing 50 mM EDTA, 7 M urea, 0.005% xylene cyanol, and 0.005% bromphenol blue. RNAs in the ribozyme reaction mixture were analyzed on a 10% polyacrylamide, 7 M urea gel.

Hammerhead ribozyme and the KSS3 substrate RNA were separately heated at 95 °C for 2 min and then cooled to the reaction temperature for at least 5 min. The two RNAs were mixed and pre-incubated with NdAg in 1× reaction buffer for 30 min at 30 °C, and the trans-cleavage reaction was initiated by the addition of MgCl2 to a final concentration of 12 mM. The reaction was performed at 30 °C for 15 min, after which samples were treated with 1 mg/ml proteinase K at 37 °C for 25 min. RNAs in the ribozyme reaction mixture were analyzed on a 15% polyacrylamide, 7 M urea gel. The radioactivity of each RNA fragment was determined by quantification using a PhosphorImager (ImageQuant; Amersham Biosciences). The relative amount of each RNA fragment was determined by dividing the radioactivity of the RNA fragment with the number of C residues in the RNA molecule; thus, the fraction of RNA undergoing cleavage was calculated.

    RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Strategy-- Previously we had shown that the N-terminal domain of hepatitis delta antigen (NdAg) modulates the cis-cleaving activity of HDV genomic RNA fragments and activates the trans-cleavage reaction between hammerhead ribozymes and cognate substrates in vitro (16). Conceivably, NdAg exerts its effect on RNA-mediated processes by acting as an RNA chaperone, promoting RNA re-folding by facilitating the breakage and reforming of base pairs. To further investigate the basis of RNA chaperone activity, purified NdAg was assayed for the ability to promote the annealing of complementary sequences in RNA oligos and complicated RNA molecules in dilute solutions, and to accelerate strand exchange between an RNA duplex and a competing sequence.

Strand Annealing Activity of NdAg-- To assay the stimulatory effect of NdAg on strand annealing, complementary oligos of low concentrations were mixed, and duplex formation was monitored. In the case of RNA oligos 22 (0.025 nM) and 11 (0.125 nM) (Fig. 1A), there was only negligible duplex formation in the absence of NdAg, but the extent and the rate of duplex formation were significantly elevated in the presence of 1 µM NdAg (Fig. 2A). Thus, NdAg promoted the annealing of complementary RNA oligos.


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Fig. 1.   The nucleic acid molecules of this study. A, RNA oligos 11, 14, 17, and 22. Oligo 22 is complementary to the other three oligos. B, DNA oligos A, B, and C. Oligos A and C are complementary to different regions of oligo B. C, U4 snRNA and U6 snRNA can form an intermolecular duplex.


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Fig. 2.   Effect of NdAg on strand annealing/hybrid formation. A, the annealing of RNA oligos. 0.025 nM 32P-labeled oligo 22 and 0.125 nM oligo 11 were mixed with 0 or 10 mM MgCl2 in the absence or presence of 1 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer (40 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 0.1 M NaCl, 0.02 mM EDTA, 2% glycerol) at room temperature for various periods. Samples were analyzed on an 18% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C. B, the annealing of DNA oligos. The reaction contains 0.5 nM 32P-labeled oligo C alone, 0.5 nM 32P-labeled oligo C and 0.4 nM oligo B, or 0.5 nM 32P-labeled oligo C and 0.4 nM oligos A and B. The annealing reaction was performed in the absence or presence of 0.5 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 20 min. Samples were resolved on a 15% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C. C, the hybridization of internally labeled U4 and U6 snRNAs. 0.5 nM U4 snRNA and 2.5 nM U6 snRNA were incubated without any protein or with 50, 200, and 500 nM NdAg in 10 µl of 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 5 s, 30 min, 60 min, and 120 min. Mock represents the control experiment with the protein fraction obtained from the BL21(DE3) cells containing the empty pET15b vector. Samples were resolved on a 7% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C. Asterisks in these and subsequent figures indicate radioactive labeling.

It is known that Mg2+ can neutralize the negative charge of phosphate groups and stabilize the structure of RNA molecules. To address the question of the effect of Mg2+ on the strand annealing activity of NdAg, we performed the strand annealing reaction in the presence of MgCl2 and/or NdAg. We found that MgCl2 of 10-40 mM alone facilitated the annealing of RNA oligos 22 and 11, although its stimulatory activity was significantly lower than that of NdAg. Nevertheless, MgCl2 at this concentration range reduced, although it did not eliminate, the strand annealing activity of 1 µM NdAg (Fig. 2A and data not shown).

Annealing assays were done on other complementary nucleic acid pairs of 11-56 nt; NdAg facilitated the annealing of all nucleic acid pairs tested, including DNA-DNA, DNA-RNA, and RNA-RNA pairs (data not shown). In the case of DNA oligos A (43 nt), B (56 nt), and C (18 nt) (oligos A and C are complementary to different regions of oligo B; Fig. 1B), NdAg greatly promoted the formation of the trimolecular duplex and both bimolecular duplexes at low DNA concentrations (~0.5 nM) (B/C and B/CA duplex data are shown in Fig. 2B).

Furthermore, NdAg accelerated the hybridization of more complicated RNAs in addition to simple complementary nucleic acid pairs. 50-500 nM NdAg facilitated 0.5 nM U4 snRNA and 2.5 nM U6 snRNA to form U4/U6 hybrid that potentially contains two intermolecular base pairing regions (Figs. 1C and 2C). All of the aforementioned simple complementary nucleic acid pairs hybridize spontaneously; however, U4 snRNA and U6 snRNA did not hybridize spontaneously at even up to 25 nM in the absence of NdAg (data not shown). This suggests NdAg influences the ability of complex RNAs to interact. Therefore, in addition to short complementary oligos, NdAg also promotes the annealing of the complementary sequences reside in longer or more complicated RNAs.

Strand Annealing/Hybrid Formation in the Presence of Non-homologous Nucleic Acid or Other Proteins-- To test whether non-homologous nucleotide sequences perturb the acceleration of strand annealing or hybrid formation stimulated by NdAg, we analyzed the hybridization of a constant amount of U4 snRNA (0.5 nM 161-nt RNA, 80.5 nM nucleotide) and U6 snRNA (2.5 nM 112-nt RNA, 280 nM nucleotide)) in the presence of increasing amounts of a non-homologous P9 RNA (a 160-nt run-off transcript of pET15b vector) at 100, 250, or 500 nM NdAg. As shown in Fig. 3A, for a 360 nM nucleotide concentration of U4 snRNA (0.5 nM RNA, 80.5 nM nucleotide) and U6 snRNA (2.5 nM RNA, 280 nM nucleotide), U4/U6 hybridization was not inhibited until the molar ratio of total nucleotide (the sum of two snRNAs and P9 RNA) to NdAg exceeded 5:1, and at higher molar ratios (>5:1), U4/U6 hybrid did not form. The result suggests that there is a finite amount of NdAg available to facilitate duplex hybridization with a limiting ratio of one NdAg to five nucleotides. To confirm this finding, we performed strand annealing reactions of DNA oligos A and B at low concentrations (total nucleotide was ~5 nM) in the presence of a relatively high concentration of NdAg (1 µM) and increasing concentrations of three kinds of nucleic acid: E. coli cellular RNA, phi X174 ssDNA and phi X174 dsDNA. As shown in Fig. 3B, B/A duplex formation was not affected by the E. coli cellular RNA or phi X174 ssDNA until the total nucleotide concentration exceeded 5 µM, whereas the presence of phi X174 dsDNA did not fully inhibit the annealing of oligos A and B at even 12 µM total nucleotide. These results support the notion that the binding site size of an NdAg monomer is ~5 nucleotides, and suggests that complementary strand annealing can occur in the presence of a 100-1000-fold excess of non-homologous sequence as long as the amount of NdAg is sufficient to coat the non-homologous sequences and the complementary nucleic acid pair.


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Fig. 3.   NdAg facilitates strand annealing in the presence of other nucleic acids. A, fixed amounts of U4 snRNA (0.5 nM RNA, 80.5 nM nucleotide) and U6 snRNA (2.5 nM RNA, 280 nM nucleotide) were mixed with increasing amounts of non-homologous P9 RNA in the presence of 0.1, 0.25, or 0.5 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 20 min. The molar fraction of U4/U6 duplex as a function of [non-homologous nucleotide]/[total nucleotide of U4 and U6 snRNAs] ratio was plotted. B, 0.1 nM DNA oligo A and 0.02 nM DNA oligo B were mixed with an increasing concentration of E. coli cellular RNA (RNA), phi X174 virion ssDNA (ssDNA), or phi X174 replication form DNA (dsDNA) in the presence of 1 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 60 min. The molar fraction of A/B duplex as a function of the concentration of non-homologous nucleotide was plotted. Data were collected from three independent experiments.

The acceleration of strand annealing/hybrid formation associated with NdAg is not specific for any particular type of nucleic acid. Hence, NdAg interacts with nucleic acid with broad specificity. We tested whether two other general nucleic acid-binding proteins share similar strand annealing properties with NdAg. We found that E. coli SSB (single-stranded nucleic acid-binding protein) and T4 phage gp32 protein at a concentration range of 1-10 µM failed to promote U4/U6 hybrid formation or to stimulate DNA or RNA duplex formation (data not shown). In addition, the stimulatory effect of 50 nM NdAg on U4/U6 hybrid formation was not perturbed in the presence of a 20-fold excess of T4 phage gp32 protein, a 50-fold excess of E. coli SSB, or a 200-fold excess of bovine serum albumin (Fig. 4). Thus, NdAg can facilitate strand annealing/hybrid formation in the presence of these two nucleic acid-binding proteins. These results indicate that the stimulation of strand annealing is not a general property of nucleic acid-binding proteins.


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Fig. 4.   NdAg facilitates strand annealing in the presence of other proteins. 0.5 nM internally labeled U4 snRNA, 2.5 nM internally labeled U6 snRNA, and 50 nM NdAg were mixed with increasing amounts of T4 gp32, E. coli SSB, or bovine serum albumin in 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 20 min. Samples were analyzed on a 7% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C. - means no protein; 1x, 10x, 20x, 50x, and 200x stand for 50 nM, 0.5 µM, 1 µM, 2.5 µM, and 10 µM protein, respectively.

NdAg Favors Extended Duplex Formation by Facilitating Strand Annealing and Strand Exchange in a Selective Fashion-- We next examined the stimulatory effect of NdAg on the annealing of RNA oligos of different lengths to a common sequence. RNA oligos 11, 17, and 22 were used for this study (Fig. 1A). Both oligos 11 and 17 are complementary to oligo 22. Oligo 17 has the same sequence as oligo 11 but also has a 2-nt extension at the 5' terminus and a 3-nt extension at the 3' terminus. Hence, oligo 17 can form a 17-base pair duplex with oligo 22, whereas oligo 11 can form an 11-base pair duplex with oligo 22. In the presence of 1 µM NdAg, the kinetics of annealing of oligos 22 and 17, and oligos 22 and 11 were quite similar, and the duplex formation reaction of both pairs of oligos reached an equilibrium within 10 min at 30, 37, and 42 °C (data not shown). The melting temperatures of the 22/11 duplex and 22/17 duplex were ~50 and ~65 °C, respectively, under annealing reaction conditions (Fig. 5A). The competitive strand annealing reaction was performed in the presence of 0.025 nM 32P-labeled oligo 22 and 0.5 nM oligos 11 and 17 at temperatures below the Tm of each duplex. In the absence of NdAg, only a small fraction of oligos formed duplexes at 30, 37, or 42 °C. Moreover, the amount of 22/11 duplex was slightly higher than that of 22/17 duplex at each temperature, and both duplexes were stable at 42 °C (Fig. 5B). In the presence of 1 µM NdAg, all of oligo 22 participated in duplex formation. However, oligo 22 annealed more favorably to oligo 17 at 30 and 37 °C, and exclusively to oligo 17 at 42 °C (Fig. 5B). Moreover, the relative amount of 22/17 and 22/11 duplexes at each incubation temperature was not changed when the reaction time varied between 10 and 180 min (data not shown). Thus, NdAg promotes the formation of a more extended duplex among competing sequences, with the activity higher at 42 °C than 30 and 37 °C. Therefore, hypothetically NdAg facilitates strand annealing or stimulates duplex dissociation in a selective manner.


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Fig. 5.   A, the double strand to single strand transition reaction of 22/17 and 22/11 duplexes. The 10-µl reaction mixture contained 0.25 nM pre-annealed 32P-labeled 22/17 duplex in 1× reaction buffer. Incubation was carried out at 25 °C for 3 min, and the temperature increased every 3 min by an increment of 5 °C to a final temperature of 75 °C for 3 min. After each step of incubation, one tube was transferred to ice and 2 µl of stop solution was added immediately. Samples were analyzed on an 18% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C. B, NdAg promotes the formation of a more extended duplex. 0.025 nM 32P-labeled oligo 22 and two competing complementary oligos 11 and 17 (0.5 nM amounts of each) were incubated with or without 1 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at the indicated temperature for 30 min. Samples were analyzed on an 18% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C.

We next monitored the ability of NdAg to promote strand exchange between an RNA duplex and a competing RNA oligo (Fig. 6). The pre-annealed 32P-labeled 22/11 duplex (0.25 nM) was mixed with a 100-fold excess of oligo 17 (25 nM). In the absence of NdAg, the pre-annealed duplex gradually dissociated over a 30-min period, with the released 32P-labeled oligo 22 concurrently forming a duplex with oligo 17. Consequently, the 32P-labeled 22/11 duplex was converted to the 32P-labeled 22/17 duplex (Fig. 6A). In the presence of NdAg, the conversion of 22/11 duplex to 22/17 duplex occurred at an elevated rate at least during the first 10 min of the reaction (Fig. 6A). Thus, in this experiment, NdAg facilitated strand exchange. However, a strikingly different result was obtained when the assay was performed using two other combinations of pre-annealed RNA duplex and a competing RNA oligo in the presence of NdAg. The data in Fig. 6 (B and C) show that strand exchange between a pre-annealed 22/14 duplex (0.25 nM) and oligo 11 (25 nM) as well as between a pre-annealed 22/17 duplex (0.25 nM) and oligo 11 (25 nM) was not observed in the presence of 1 µM NdAg; each pre-annealed duplex was stabilized by NdAg instead. In the absence of NdAg, there was a build-up of 22/11 duplex after 10 min, whereas the conversion of the pre-annealed duplex to 22/11 duplex was not completed. Because 22/14 duplex and 22/17 duplex contain more base pairs than 22/11 duplex, NdAg appears to promote strand exchange only when the formation of a more extended duplex occurs. These results suggest that NdAg promotes strand exchange in a selective fashion, and excludes the only role of NdAg in the strand exchange process as being the promotion of the dissociation of the pre-annealed duplex.


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Fig. 6.   Effect of NdAg and magnesium ion on strand exchange. A pre-annealed 32P-labeled RNA duplex (0.25 nM) and an RNA oligo (25 nM) were mixed in the absence or presence of 1 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at 30 °C for various periods (22/11 duplex and oligo 17 for A, 22/14 duplex and oligo 11 for B, and 22/17 duplex and oligo 11 for C). The RNA duplex and RNA oligo were heated at 95 °C for 5 min and then cooled to 50 °C for 5 min in the absence of NdAg as the control. This does not necessarily bring the system to equilibrium. For panel D, 0.25 nM pre-annealed 32P-labeled 22/11 duplex and 25 nM RNA oligo 17 were mixed with 0-20 mM MgCl2 in the absence or presence of 1 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 5 min. All samples were analyzed on a 15% polyacrylamide, 0.1% SDS gel at 4 °C.

Furthermore, the strand exchange reaction was also performed in the presence of MgCl2 with or without NdAg. We found that 1 µM NdAg speeded up the strand exchange reaction between 22/11 duplex and RNA oligo 17 in the presence of 0-5 mM MgCl2 but failed to facilitate the conversion of 22/11 duplex to 22/17 duplex in the presence of 10 or 20 mM MgCl2 (Fig. 6D).

NdAg May Not Alter the Structure of a Stable RNA-- The studies with the synthetic nucleic acid oligos disclose that NdAg promotes strand annealing and strand exchange in a selective fashion, with this property allowing NdAg to stimulate the formation of the most stable duplex among complementary sequences. This finding led us to speculate that NdAg could assist a contiguous sequence in adopting a stable structure, which may not be biologically active, and that NdAg would not alter the structure of a stable RNA. Here we investigated these speculations by studying the effect of NdAg on an RNA that contains the autolytic domain of the HDV genome and a cis-acting hepatitis delta ribozyme mutant that has a more stable structure than its wild type counterpart. Because hepatitis delta ribozyme has to adopt a specific catalytic structure, the alteration of autocatalytic activity upon NdAg treatment reflects ribozyme structure change.

HJ12L contains the autolytic domain of the HDV genome, and Rz1.H2 is a hepatitis delta ribozyme mutant that has had its helix 1 substituted, the helix 2 extended from 5 to 8 base pairs, and the helix 4 replaced by a stable hairpin loop (Fig. 7A). Rz1.H2 cis-cleaved efficiently and rapidly in the absence of NdAg, whereas HJ12L was much less active under the same conditions (Fig. 7B). The extended helix 2 rather than the alterations in helixes 1 and 4 of Rz1.H2 may account for the elevated cis-cleaving activity under native conditions, because we showed previously that the elongation of helix 2 enhances the resistance to formamide and stabilized the catalytic core of hepatitis delta ribozymes (17). Moreover, in the experiment shown in Fig. 7B, we found that pre-mixing with NdAg prior to the initiation of cis-cleavage did not alter the cis-cleavage reaction of Rz1.H2, whereas the same treatment attenuated the cis-cleaving activity of HJ12L. The results indicate that NdAg modified the structure of HJ12L but not Rz1.H2 and that the interaction with NdAg does not alter the catalysis of Rz1.H2. The finding supports the hypothesis that NdAg does not modify the structure of a stable RNA.


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Fig. 7.   Effect of NdAg on the cis-cleavage reaction of HJ12L and Rz1.H2. A, the sequence and proposed secondary structure of HJ12L and Rz1.H2. HJ12L contains nt 683-770 of HDV genomic sense RNA; lowercase letters were the sequence derived from the cloning vector during in vitro synthesis. Rz1.H2 is a hepatitis delta ribozyme. x in each RNA represents the cleaving point, and H1-H4 are the four double-stranded regions of the ribozyme molecule. B, each RNA was incubated with or without 240 nM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer at 37 °C for 30 min, after which the cis-cleavage reaction was initiated by the addition of 12 mM MgCl2. Full-length RNA (1o) was resolved from the 3' cleavage product (3'P) on a 10% polyacrylamide-urea gel. The 5' cleavage product ran off the gel.

Effect of NdAg on the Reaction of a Trans-acting Hammerhead Ribozyme-- We then used the trans-cleavage reactions of a hammerhead ribozyme HH16 to further study the RNA chaperone activity of NdAg. The trans-cleavage reaction of a hammerhead ribozyme involves at least two steps. First, the ribozyme anneals to its target in a substrate RNA for the assembly of a hammerhead catalytic domain; then, cleavage occurs at a specific location by the catalysis of divalent cations (18). KSS3 is a 107-nt RNA containing three targets for the hammerhead ribozyme HH16 (Fig. 8A). The first target has a C to A substitution; hence, upon binding to HH16, the helix I of the reconstituted hammerhead catalytic domain contains an AG mismatched pair. The second and the third targets are completely matched to HH16; each can form 16 base pairs with HH16. HH163 is a mutant of HH16 and has a G to U substitution to compensate for the mutation of the first ribozyme target of KSS3 (i.e. no mismatch; Fig. 8A). We showed previously that NdAg promotes the trans-cleavage reaction of HH16 and all its targets in KSS3 under ribozyme excess conditions, with NdAg appearing to exert its effect by elevating the mutual accessibility of two RNAs (16). Here, we found that >95% of KSS3 was cleaved by HH16 and HH163 when 1 nM KSS3 and 10 nM of each ribozyme were pre-incubated with 1 µM NdAg prior to the initiation of trans-cleavage (Fig. 8B). Furthermore, the major products of the two ribozymes were the same; they were the 49-, 23/22-, and 13-nt RNAs, with none of them containing any ribozyme target (Fig. 8B; the 22- and 23-nt RNAs were not resolved on the gel). Therefore, with an excess amount of ribozyme and the facilitation of NdAg, each ribozyme target of KSS3 is available for ribozyme binding and cleavage. The mismatched base pair in the helix I region of the hammerhead catalytic domain does not prevent cleavage under these reaction conditions.


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Fig. 8.   Effect of NdAg on the trans-cleavage reaction of hammerhead ribozymes. A, hammerhead ribozymes HH16 and HH163, and KSS3 substrate RNA. The underlined sequences in KSS3 are the target of hammerhead ribozymes; 1, 2, and 3 indicate the cleavage sites. B, cleavage of 1 nM KSS3 by 1 or 10 nM hammerhead ribozyme in the absence of NdAg or in the presence of 0.2 or 1 µM NdAg in 1× reaction buffer. Samples were analyzed on a 15% polyacrylamide, 7 M urea gel. The overall extent of cleavage of KSS3 was calculated and presented as percentage cleaved at the bottom of the gel.

We then used the same system to analyze the ability of NdAg to aid HH16 and HH163 in discriminating different ribozyme targets in KSS3 under a condition with the ribozyme target in excess of the ribozyme. We performed the trans-cleavage reaction of 1 nM KSS3 and 1 nM HH16 or HH163 (each KSS3 contains three ribozyme targets; therefore, the molar ratio of ribozyme target to ribozyme is 3). We found that the pre-incubation of two RNAs with 0.2 or 1 µM NdAg promoted trans-cleavage significantly; the overall extent of cleavage of KSS3 was elevated from less than 5% to >40% for each ribozyme. However, three ribozyme targets in KSS3 were not equally accessible to each ribozyme. In the case of HH16, the amount of the 72-nt RNA, which contains the first target, was dominant over the amount of all other cleavage products, indicating most of the cleavage events occurred at the second and third targets that are completely matched to HH16. In the case of HH163, the major cleavage products were the 58-nt RNA, which contains the second and third targets, and the 49-nt RNA, indicating the cleavage process occurred predominantly at the first target that is completely matched to HH163. These results illustrate that, when ribozyme is limiting, NdAg selectively promotes the annealing of ribozyme to its completely matched target in the substrate RNA.

    DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

We showed previously that NdAg is able to modify the structure of HDV RNA and non-HDV RNAs (16). This property is known as RNA chaperone activity (11). In this study we set up model systems to further analyze the RNA chaperone activity of NdAg. We found that NdAg can facilitate rearrangements of RNAs into more stable structures by selectively accelerating the annealing of complementary sequences, as well as by selectively promoting strand exchange.

How Does NdAg Stimulate Strand Annealing?-- Many nucleic acid chaperones identified so far, such as the nucleocapsid protein of human immunodeficiency virus (NCp7) (19, 20), the prion protein (PrP) (21), the ORF1 protein of mouse LINE-1 retrotransposon (22), heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (23, 24), and the major messenger ribonucleoprotein particle protein p50 (25), facilitate the annealing of a variety of complementary sequences. These proteins and NdAg do not have a common structural domain or sequence motif for this strand annealing activity except that most of them are rich in basic residues. Basic residues can participate in nonspecific, electrostatic interaction with nucleic acids, so the binding of NdAg and other nucleic acid chaperones may facilitate complementary strand annealing by charge shielding. Nevertheless, the extent of strand annealing stimulated by each of these proteins appears to be too great to be explained solely by a reduction in electrostatic repulsion.

NdAg contains the coiled-coil domain of hepatitis delta antigen. A synthetic peptide delta 12-60 corresponding to aa 12-60 of hepatitis delta antigen forms anti-parallel coiled-coil dimers with its surface lined with basic side chains, and delta 12-60 dimer can associate with other dimers to form doughnut-like octamers (26). We speculate that NdAg has a structure similar to that of delta 12-60 peptide and NdAg binds nucleic acids as coiled-coil dimers in a nonspecific manner mainly through charge-charge interactions. After this, a dimer may interact with other dimers to form multimers of NdAg, consequently, bringing complementary nucleic acid strands together via protein-protein interaction. Alternatively, NdAg may form multimers with each multimer interacting with several nucleic acid molecules simultaneously. Because NdAg remains associated with nucleic acids after facilitating strand annealing, nucleic acid molecules must be able to change positions rapidly in the nucleic acid-NdAg complex to find their pairing partners. Therefore, NdAg could facilitate annealing by increasing the local concentration of complementary strands.

How Does NdAg Facilitate the Formation of a More Stable Structure?-- In this study we found that NdAg promotes RNA to adopt a more stable structure via several methods. First, NdAg catalyzes annealing differentially among competing sequences; second, NdAg facilitates strand exchange selectively between a duplex and a single-stranded nucleic acid; and third, NdAg stabilizes a duplex if a competing nucleic acid, for the formation of a more stable duplex, is absent. Moreover, NdAg can modify the structure of short oligonucleotides and long RNAs either intermolecularly or intramolecularly (this study and Ref. 16). We suspect that NdAg catalyzes selective strand annealing and selective strand exchange by allowing the single strand left-right-arrow double strand transition to reach an equilibrium more rapidly than normal. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the formation of a more stable structure remain to be elucidated, e.g. because all short duplexes for the strand exchange analysis of this study are perfect duplexes with single-stranded overhangs, factors that determine the efficiency of the strand exchange process, such as internal mismatches, the length/sequence of the initial duplex and the role of the single-stranded overhangs, remain to be identified. In addition, whether the strand exchange process requires the complete dissociation of the initial duplex or whether partial melting of the initial duplex is sufficient to initiate strand exchange remains to be studied.

The Effect of Mg2+ on the RNA Chaperone Activity of NdAg-- In this report we showed that, in the presence of >= 10 mM Mg2+, the strand exchange activity of 1 µM NdAg is attenuated. We suspect that NdAg may not exert its effect on RNA structural modification in the presence of >= 10 mM Mg2+. This speculation is supported by our previous observations; the ability of NdAg to modulate the cis-cleaving activity of HDV subgenomic fragments and to stimulate the catalytic activity of hammerhead trans-acting ribozymes relies on the pre-incubation of NdAg with the relevant RNA molecules in the absence of Mg2+ prior to the initiation of cleavage by the addition of Mg2+ (16)2; and 1 µM NdAg in conditions of limiting hammerhead trans-acting ribozyme, with a Mg2+ concentration of 12 mM, resulted in a very low rate of hammerhead ribozyme turnover, i.e. the release of cleavage products from ribozyme for the binding of new substrate (16). Thus, Mg2+ attenuates the RNA chaperone activity of NdAg.

What Is the Possible Role of Hepatitis Delta Antigen in Vivo?-- The finding that NdAg possesses RNA chaperone activity strongly emphasizes the importance of this activity in the life cycle of HDV. Hepatitis delta antigen stimulates viral genome replication and HDV mRNA transcription (27-29). One end of the rodlike structure of the HDV genome, which has a highly ordered structure conserved between HDV isolates, contains the promoters to direct the synthesis of viral antigenomic RNA and the 0.8-kb mRNA (30-33). Because hepatitis delta antigen stimulates the rearrangement of RNAs into more stable structures, this protein may allow the HDV genome to adopt an active promoter structure to recruit cellular factors for replication and transcription.

The cis-cleaving activity of HDV RNA is involved in the processing of multimeric RNA during viral replication (8, 9). The ribozyme domain requires a pseudoknot structure for catalysis, but because of the highly self-complementary nature of HDV RNA, the catalytically active structure is not expected to exist in multimeric size RNA. How is the ribozyme conformation formed on multimeric size RNA molecules? Because hepatitis delta antigen can modulate the ribozyme activity of HDV subgenomic fragments in vitro (16) and can enhance ribozyme activity in vivo (10), hepatitis delta antigen appears to be a facilitator of the processing reaction, although the mechanism remains unsolved. Moreover, in addition to modulating the activity of HDV ribozyme during viral replication, hepatitis delta antigen may stabilize the HDV genome by preventing circular monomers from adopting thermodynamically unstable and catalytically active pseudoknot structure.

The core of the RNA chaperone domain of hepatitis delta antigen has been located at aa 24-59 (16). Therefore, the arginine-rich sequence (aa 2-27) and the arginine-rich motifs (aa 97-107 and aa 136-146) of hepatitis delta antigen that bind specifically to HDV RNA in a rodlike structure in vitro (34, 35) are not required for the RNA chaperone activity. However, these "HDV RNA binding motifs" may allow hepatitis delta antigen to interact preferentially with HDV RNA in virus-infected cells.

Applications-- In this report, we have demonstrated that NdAg improves the specificity of hammerhead trans-acting ribozymes. The selective strand annealing activity and the selective strand exchange activity of NdAg may have other practical applications. The ability of NdAg to promote the formation of a more stable duplex might be employed to elevate the accuracy of nucleic acid annealing for primer extension reactions, polymerase chain reactions, reverse transcription reactions, and all kinds of hybridization reactions, such as in situ, Southern, and Northern hybridizations. Whether NdAg is useful in these applications remains to be explored.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Drs. S. C. Cheng, M. Lai, and M. S. Lin for discussion and for comments on the manuscript. We thank Dr. K. Deen for English editing.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported by the Academia Sinica (Republic of China) and by Grants NSC-89-2311-B-001-077 and NSC-90-2311-B-001-013 from the National Science Council (Republic of China).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Dagger To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 886-2-27883134; Fax: 886-2-27826085; E-mail: hnwu@gate.sinica.edu.tw.

Published, JBC Papers in Press, December 3, 2002, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M207938200

2 Z.-S. Huang and H.-N. Wu, unpublished observation.

    ABBREVIATIONS

The abbreviations used are: HDV, hepatitis delta virus; SSB, single-stranded DNA-binding protein; aa, amino acid(s); nt, nucleotide(s); oligo, oligonucleotide; snRNA, small nuclear RNA; ssDNA, single-stranded DNA; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA.

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