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Is a closing “GA pair” a rule for stable loop-loop RNA complexes?

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Is a closing “GA pair” a rule for stable loop-loop RNA complexes?

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RNA hairpin aptamers specific for the trans-activation-responsive (TAR) RNA element of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 were identified by in vitro selection (DucongĂ©, F., and ToulmĂ©, J. J. (1999) RNA 5, 1605-1614). The high affinity sequences selected at physiological magnesium concentration (3 mm) were shown to form a loop-loop complex with the targeted TAR RNA. The stability of this complex depends on the aptamer loop closing “GA pair” as characterized by preliminary electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Thermal denaturation monitored by UV-absorption spectroscopy and binding kinetics determined by surface plasmon resonance show that the GA pair is crucial for the formation of the TAR-RNA aptamer complex. Both thermal denaturation and surface plasmon resonance experiments show that any other “pairs” leads to complexes whose stability decreases in the order AG > GG > GU > AA > GC > UA >> CA, CU. The binding kinetics indicate that stability is controlled by the off-rate rather tha

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