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In view of the diverse functionalities of RNA, the search for tools suitable for regulating and understanding RNA grows continuously. Dysfunction of RNA controlled processes can lead to diseases, calling for external regulation mechanisms – a difficult task in view of the complexity of biological systems. One of the recently developed methods that aim to systematically control RNA relates to photoregulation. Here, the RNA functions are triggered by photochromic molecules – for example, azobenzene or spiropyran – which are bound either covalently or non-covalently to the target RNA. This is a flexible approach, which can be improved by using suitably substituted chromophores. However, many issues regarding the details of photocontrol are still open. A detailed understanding of the mechanism of photocontrol is therefore of crucial importance.
The present thesis explores theoretical approaches to the photocontrol of RNA, focussing upon azobenzene chromophores covalently bound to RNA. The aim of the thesis is to characterize, at a molecular level, the effect of trans-to-cis isomerization of the azobenzene chromophore on RNA, and thus understand the mechanism of RNA unfolding triggered by azobenzene isomerization. In particular, we attempt to answer the following questions:
How does azobenzene isomerization happen in an RNA environment, i.e., how is
the isomerization influenced by the local RNA environment?
Conversely, how is RNA dynamics, on a longer time scale, affected by azobenzene attachment and photoisomerization?
Further, can regulation be enhanced by substituted azobenzenes? And, does simulation yield a picture that is consistent with experiment?
Due to the very different times scales of azobenzene isomerization (femtoseconds to picoseconds) and the much slower RNA response (nanoseconds to milliseconds), complementary techniques have been chosen: (i) hybrid quantum-classical approaches, i.e., on-the-fly Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics (QM/MM), to characterize the isomerization and RNA response on an ultrafast time scale, and (ii) molecular dynamics with enhanced sampling techniques, in particular, Replica Exchange MD (REMD), to explore longer time scales where the effect of RNA unfolding becomes manifest. Furthermore, substituent effects on azobenzene were separately investigated, in collaboration with two experimental groups.
The first part of this thesis is focused on the conformational influence of azobenzene on a small RNA hairpin on longer time scales using REMD simulations. In accordance with experiment, it is found that both the trans and cis form of azobenzene destabilize the RNA system. Trans azobenzene stays stacked in the double strand, whereas the cis form flips out of the RNA. These stacking interactions are the main reason why a trans azobenzene-RNA-complex is more stable than a cis-azobenzene-RNA-complex. Furthermore, the loop region of the RNA hairpin is highly destabilized by the intercalation of azobenzene.
In the second part, on-the-fly QM/MM simulations of the same azobenzene substituted hairpin are undertaken. These simulations use a surface hopping (SH) algorithm in conjunction with hybrid QM/MM electronic structure calculations to give a complete picture of the isomerization process on a picosecond time scale. It is shown that, due to the constraints of the RNA environment, the isomerization time of the azobenzene chromophore is significantly increased (from 300 femtoseconds in the gas phase to around 20 picoseconds in the RNA environment), and the isomerization yield is low. To the best of our knowledge, these are the first QM/MM simulations reported for azobenzene in a nucleic acid environment.
In the third and final part of this thesis, the properties of substituted azobenzenes have been explored, in collaboration with two experimental groups at the department. In particular, para- and meta-hydroxy substituted azobenzenes were suggested as improved photoswitches for the photoregulation of RNA, but spectroscopic investigations showed that isomerization was inefficient in some of the investigated species. Therefore, we investigated the photoisomerisation pathway of the keto/enol-form of para- and meta-hydroxy-azobenzenes by Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory (TDDFT) calculations. These calculations show that the competing keto/enol-tautomerism can result in an unstable cis form, making these substituted chromophores unsuitable as photoswitches.
Overall, the present thesis has contributed to obtaining a molecular-level understanding of photocontrol in azobenzene substituted RNAs, showing that theory and simulations can provide useful guidance for new experiments.
The photoregulation of nucleic acids by azobenzene photoswitches has recently attracted considerable interest in the context of emerging biotechnological applications. To understand the mechanism of photoinduced isomerisation and conformational control in these complex biological environments, we employ a Quantum Mechanics/Molecular Mechanics (QM/MM) approach in conjunction with nonadiabatic Surface Hopping (SH) dynamics. Two representative RNA–azobenzene complexes are investigated, both of which contain the azobenzene chromophore covalently attached to an RNA double strand via a β-deoxyribose linker. Due to the pronounced constraints of the local RNA environment, it is found that trans-to-cis isomerization is slowed down to a time scale of ∼10–15 picoseconds, in contrast to 500 femtoseconds in vacuo, with a quantum yield reduced by a factor of two. By contrast, cis-to-trans isomerization remains in a sub-picosecond regime. A volume-conserving isomerization mechanism is found, similarly to the pedal-like mechanism previously identified for azobenzene in solution phase. Strikingly, the chiral RNA environment induces opposite right-handed and left-handed helicities of the ground-state cis-azobenzene chromophore in the two RNA–azobenzene complexes, along with an almost completely chirality conserving photochemical pathway for these helical enantiomers.