Non-coding RNAs must fold into specific structures that are stabilized by metal ions and other co-solutes in the cell's interior. Large crowder molecules such as PEG stabilize a bacterial group I ribozyme so that the RNA folds in low Mg2+ concentrations typical of the cell's interior. To understand the thermodynamic origins of stabilization by crowder molecules, small angle X-ray scattering was used to measure the folding and helix assembly of a bacterial group I ribozyme at different temperatures and in different MgCl2 and polyethylene glycol (PEG) concentrations. The resulting phase diagrams show that perturbations to folding by each variable do not overlap. A favorable enthalpy change drives the formation of compact, native-like structures, but requires Mg2+ ions at all temperatures studied (5-55°C). PEG reduces the entropic cost of helix assembly and increases correlations between RNA segments at all temperatures. The phase diagrams also revealed a semi-compact intermediate between the unfolded and folded ensemble that is locally more flexible than the unfolded state, as judged by SHAPE modification. These results suggest that environmental variables such as temperature and solute density will favor different types of RNA structures.
© The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.