Adenosines are present at a disproportionately
high frequency within several RNA structural motifs. To
explore the importance of individual adenosine functional
groups for group I intron activity, we performed Nucleotide
Analog Interference Mapping (NAIM) with a collection of
adenosine analogues. This paper reports the synthesis,
transcriptional incorporation, and the observed interference
pattern throughout the Tetrahymena group I intron
for eight adenosine derivatives tagged with an α-phosphorothioate
linkage for use in NAIM. All of the analogues were accurately
incorporated into the transcript as an A. The sites that
interfere with the 3′-exon ligation reaction of the
Tetrahymena intron are coincident with the sites
of phylogenetic conservation, yet the interference patterns
for each analogue are different. These interference data
provide several biochemical constraints that improve our
understanding of the Tetrahymena ribozyme structure.
For example, the data support an essential A-platform within
the J6/6a region, major groove packing of the P3 and P7
helices, minor groove packing of the P3 and J4/5 helices,
and an axial model for binding of the guanosine cofactor.
The data also identify several essential functional groups
within a highly conserved single-stranded region in the
core of the intron (J8/7). At four sites in the intron,
interference was observed with 2′-fluoro A, but not
with 2′-deoxy A. Based upon comparison with the P4-P6
crystal structure, this may provide a biochemical signature
for nucleotide positions where the ribose sugar adopts
an essential C2′-endo conformation. In other cases
where there is interference with 2′-deoxy A, the
presence or absence of 2′-fluoro A interference helps
to establish whether the 2′-OH acts as a hydrogen
bond donor or acceptor. Mapping of the Tetrahymena
intron establishes a basis set of information that will
allow these reagents to be used with confidence in systems
that are less well understood.