of Hfq is conserved among Sm/Lsm proteins and interacts with single-stranded U’s at the 3
′
ends of sRNAs (123–126). These interactions were shown to be important for sRNA
stability in the cell (127–130). The opposite “distal” face of
E. coli Hfq binds a single-
stranded AAN triplet motif present in mRNA targets of Hfq and sRNA regulation (131–
133), as well as a minor class of sRNA (130). AAN recognition was found to be important
for sRNA up-regulation of
rpoS translation in E. coli (132, 134, 135), and down-regulation
of many targets by Spot 42 (136). Thus, one Hfq ring can bring together an sRNA and
mRNA, promoting their association (69, 115, 131, 137). In addition to these sequence-
specific binding surfaces, the lateral edge or rim of the Hfq hexamer contains patches of
basic residues (usually arginines) that interact with complementary regions of each RNA
(138, 139). The importance of these multi-lateral interactions for Hfq-dependent sRNA
regulation have been supported by additional mutational analyses and in-cell crosslinking
and co-immunoprecipitation (
e.g., (118, 131, 140)(130, 141–143)).
A variety of biophysical experiments showed that Hfq accelerates base pairing between
complementary RNA strands (70, 71, 144, 145), and this annealing activity requires the
basic patch on the rim of the hexamer (139, 146). Like other RNA chaperone proteins, Hfq
binds substrate RNA within a few seconds, but then cycles off the sRNA-mRNA duplex
once base pairing is complete (70, 72). Single-molecule FRET studies using short RNA
substrates showed that stable annealing is preceded by transient RNA binding to Hfq, and
that Hfq dissociates from the RNA duplex soon after base pairing occurs (147). Although
Hfq is reported to bind ATP (148, 149), Hfq lacks a RecA-like domain, and ATP hydrolysis
is not needed for its annealing activity (70, 144, 145).
It is not known precisely how the arginine side chains on the rim of the Hfq hexamer
facilitate RNA base pairing, but several features of the annealing reaction have been
established. First, interactions between the rim and UA motifs in the body of the sRNA
(128) predispose the seed region for base pairing with a complementary strand (138),
perhaps by increasing the flexibility of the bound sRNA (150). Second, the arginines directly
stabilize a helix initiation complex, either by overcoming electrostatic repulsion of the two
RNA strands or by hydrogen bonding (151). Third, by simultaneously interacting with the
RNA via its proximal, distal and lateral rim surfaces, Hfq can refold the RNA into a
structure that is more amenable to pairing with its complement. For example, the distal face
of Hfq is recruited to an (AAN)
4
motif in an upstream domain of the
rpoS mRNA 5
′
UTR
(132, 152), while the rim interacts with a U-rich loop downstream of the sRNA target site
(142). SHAPE modification and SAXS experiments showed that this multi-site recognition
folds the
rpoS 5
′
UTR into distorted structure that is poised to base pair with sRNAs that
regulate
rpoS expression (153). Other mRNA targets of sRNA and Hfq regulation similarly
contain multiple Hfq recognition sites (118, 154–156), suggesting that distortion of the
mRNA conformation is a common strategy for enhancing the efficiency of sRNA regulation.
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