• RNA: Two strands are tougher than one

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Jul 29 21:30:42 2021
    RNA: Two strands are tougher than one

    Date:
    July 29, 2021
    Source:
    Washington University in St. Louis
    Summary:
    Research reveals key differences between single- and double-stranded
    RNA, insights that may prove useful to fields from agriculture
    to medicine.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Messenger RNA, or mRNA, has been in the news recently as a crucial
    component of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines. The
    nucleic acid looks, for all intents and purposes, like a strand of DNA
    that has been sliced the long way. It's what's known as single-stranded
    RNA (ssRNA), and it can be found throughout the natural world.


    ==========================================================================
    Less common in nature is double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), which has two
    strands and resembles the well-known DNA double helix. It's found in
    some viruses, but for the past few decades, people have been developing synthetic dsRNA for a range of purposes.

    Despite our growing familiarity with its potential applications,
    researchers knew little about a key feature of dsRNA, namely how dsRNA
    degrades -- a particularly important question as one of its most promising applications is in agriculture as a type of pesticide.

    Research from the lab of Kimberly Parker, assistant professor of
    energy, environmental and chemical engineering at the McKelvey School
    of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis, has upended common assumptions about the chemical stability of dsRNA that may prove useful
    to fields from agriculture to medicine. The lab's findings even may
    have implications for our understanding of the origins of life. The
    results were published this summer in the journal Environmental Science
    & Technology.

    "Fundamentally, we are challenging a pervasive assumption that what we
    know about ssRNA behavior predicts dsRNA behavior," Parker said.

    "The general knowledge is that RNA is less stable than DNA," Parker said.

    That's because the RNA structure has a few extra atoms that causes the
    nucleic acid to degrade by itself to smaller pieces.



    ==========================================================================
    But that's the comparison of ssRNA with DNA. What about the difference
    between ssRNA and dsRNA? Parker and first author Ke Zhang, a PhD student
    in Parker's lab, set out to investigate dsRNA degradation. The team
    found that, even though dsRNA has the same basic structure as ssRNA, it
    was substantially more chemically stable than ssRNA. Even at extremely
    harsh alkaline pH conditions that caused ssRNA to degrade in minutes,
    dsRNA persisted.

    It's fundamental science, but it also has real consequences.

    Although little was known about the processes that break down dsRNA,
    it has been treated as if it behaves the same as ssRNA not only by
    researchers, but also by institutions such as the Environmental Protection Agency, which regulates pesticide use.

    Recently, dsRNA has become a hot topic in the world of pesticides. The
    first crops genetically engineered to contain a dsRNA pesticide might
    be planted as soon as 2022.



    ========================================================================== "When we look at the environmental fate of dsRNA pesticides, a key
    question is, 'Will these things stick around, or are they going to
    degrade quickly?'" Parker said.

    If chemical processes acting on dsRNA cause the structure to break down quickly, "it can be considered potentially safe and you don't have to
    worry about it as much," Parker said. "But if you need more specific
    conditions for it to break down, particular enzymes for instance, that
    changes how you have to think about its safety and potential risk to
    the environment. You can't rely on chemical instability alone to limit persistence." The researchers also investigated how the surprising
    chemical stability of dsRNA might be harnessed for good. Although dsRNA
    is chemically stable, it still can be degraded by enzymes that occur
    everywhere in the environment - - and even our bodies. This can make it difficult to store dsRNA pesticides and products, as well as challenging
    to measure levels of dsRNA accurately because the dsRNA can degrade
    after the sample is collected but before it is analyzed.

    To see if the unique chemical stability of dsRNA could be used to
    stabilize dsRNA in samples, Zhang looked at how ssRNA and dsRNA degraded
    in human saliva and soils, each of which has enzymes that work to break
    down both types of RNA.

    "In each case, both types of RNA were degraded quickly by the enzymes
    in human saliva and soils," Zhang said. But when the pH was raised
    to an alkaline state -- which would destroy the enzymes, "things were different; we observed ssRNA was also rapidly degraded by the alkaline conditions. However, dsRNA was actually more stable at the higher pH."
    The finding suggests that dsRNA -- whether used in pesticides, for medical
    use or research -- should be stored in a high pH environment to confer
    an extra level of protection.

    "Say you work with dsRNA," Parker said. Maybe you sneeze? "You don't
    want to worry about contaminating your samples with saliva. You can
    raise the pH of your samples of dsRNA, shut down the enzyme degradation,
    but also avoid having the chemical degradation process." The potential
    to put this knowledge into action goes far beyond pesticides.

    There are plenty of viruses that carry their genetic information in RNA
    instead of DNA; some of them use dsRNA. "I'm interested in how our work
    lets us know about how viruses might be killed in different conditions,"
    she said. Or if viral dsRNA from wastewater could be preserved better
    at higher pH to help to follow and predict the spread of disease.

    And there's another area, a little different from the rest, in which a
    better understanding of dsRNA might be useful: unlocking the mysteries
    of the origin of life on Earth. It's only conjecture, but it's something
    that captured Zhang's interest.

    There is a long-held theory that life on Earth began in hydrothermal vents
    when smaller molecules came together to form RNA. However, that theory
    has a fatal flaw: The conditions in these vents would have been alkaline.

    "Some scientists think that can't be possible because RNA
    would degrade in such conditions," Zhang said. "But we
    have found that it's only true for ssRNA. If we consider
    dsRNA, at alkaline pH, it can maintain its chemical stability." ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Washington_University_in_St._Louis. Original written by Brandie
    Jefferson. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Ke Zhang, Joseph Hodge, Anamika Chatterjee, Tae Seok Moon,
    Kimberly M.

    Parker. Duplex Structure of Double-Stranded RNA Provides
    Stability against Hydrolysis Relative to Single-Stranded
    RNA. Environmental Science & Technology, 2021; 55 (12): 8045 DOI:
    10.1021/acs.est.1c01255 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/07/210729122052.htm

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