Co-transcriptional folding orchestrates sequential multi-effector sensing by a glycine tandem riboswitch

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Co-transcriptional folding orchestrates sequential multi-effector sensing by a glycine tandem riboswitch

Authors

Romero, R. A.; Chauvier, A. G.; Teh, S. S.; Reed, V. A.; Zhang, S.; Szyjka, C. E.; Chen, S.-J.; Strobel, E. J.; Walter, N. G.

Abstract

Riboswitches are non-coding RNA motifs that regulate gene expression in response to ligand binding. The glycine tandem riboswitch (GTR) is notable because it comprises two distinct glycine aptamers that interact extensively. These inter-aptamer contacts drive conformational changes in the downstream expression platform to control gene expression. Despite extensive studies, the role of glycine and RNA folding pathways in co-transcriptional regulation remains unclear. Here, we integrate single-molecule kinetic analysis, co-transcriptional RNA structure probing, and computational modeling to reveal that the GTR processes multiple molecular inputs sequentially, guided by polymerase pausing. Our findings elucidate its stepwise 5\'-to-3\' folding pathway and demonstrate how sequential glycine binding to each aptamer, K+ binding to a kink-turn, non-native RNA folding intermediates, inter-aptamer docking that drives binding site pre-organization, and modulation by the transcription factor NusA collectively orchestrate co-transcriptional gene regulation. These results support a model in which glycine binding cooperativity arises through non-equilibrium mechanisms rather than a classical concerted model.

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