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  4. F14 - Faculty of Biochemistry, Chemistry and Pharmacy
  5. Faculty of Biochemistry, Chemistry and Pharmacy: Research Data
  6. Biophysical characterization of the conformational landscape underlying SARS-CoV-2 RNA genome circularization
 
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Title(s)
TitleLanguage
Biophysical characterization of the conformational landscape underlying SARS-CoV-2 RNA genome circularization
en
 
Author(s)
NameORCIDGNDAffiliation
Becker, Matthias Alexander
0009-0004-0059-0597
Biochemistry 
Robio, Zineb
Biochemistry 
Richter, Christian 
0000-0002-5420-2826
Biochemistry 
Wacker, Anna
0000-0001-5892-5661
Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology 
Stirnal, Elke
Biochemistry 
Witt, Kerstin
Biochemistry 
Schwalbe, Harald Jochen 
0000-0001-5693-7909
Biochemistry 
 
Faculty
14 Biochemistry, Chemistry and Pharmacy
 
Date Issued
20 April 2026
 
Publisher(s)
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt
 
Handle
https://gude.uni-frankfurt.de/handle/gude/766
 
DOI
10.25716/gude.0kwm-xyaj
 

Type(s) of data
Dataset
 
Language(s)
en
 
Abstract(s)
AbstractLanguage
RNA viruses possess strictly conserved RNA segments that adopt local structures and act as regulatory cis-acting elements. In addition, long-range RNA-RNA interactions between distant parts of their genome add additional layers of regulatory control. In SARS-CoV-2, crosslinking experiments identified multiple transiently formed long-range interactions within its genome. The longest distance interaction occurs between nucleotides in the 5’- and the 3’-terminal, untranslated regions (UTR’s). Their interaction requires opening of the 5’SL3 element that contains the transcription regulatory core sequence (TRS-L) in the 5’-UTR and of the 3’SL3base element in the 3’-UTR. In this study, we investigate the minimal sequence context necessary for formation of this long-range interaction. We determine alternative secondary structures formed by these elements, their thermodynamic stability and the stability of individual base-pairs. Further, we quantify populations and kinetic parameters in a three-strand equilibrium between the circularized form and the alternative structures formed within the UTR’s. We demonstrate that the stability of circularization is significantly reduced in subgenomic RNAs, pointing at a role of circularization in differentiating between genomic and subgenomic RNA during the viral life cycle.
en
 
Description(s)
DescriptionLanguage
raw NMR and MST data and a script to fit EXSY data from the manuscript and the Supporting Information
en
 

License
All rights reserved
 

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