The Bacillus stearothermophilus ribosomal
protein S15 binds to a phylogenetically conserved three-way
junction formed by the intersection of helices 20, 21,
and 22 of eubacterial 16S ribosomal RNA, inducing a large
conformational change in the RNA. Like many RNA structures,
this three-way junction can also be folded by the addition
of polyvalent cations such as magnesium, as demonstrated
by comparing the mobilities of the wild-type and mutant
junctions in the absence and presence of polyvalent cations
in nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels. Using a modification
interference assay, critical nucleotides for folding have
been identified as the phylogenetically conserved nucleotides
in the three-way junction. NMR spectroscopy of the junction
reveals that the conformations induced by the addition
of magnesium or S15 are extremely similar. Thus, the folding
of the junction is determined entirely by RNA elements
within the phylogenetically conserved junction core, and
the role of Mg2+ and S15 is to stabilize this
intrinsically unstable structure. The organization of the
junction by Mg2+ significantly enhances the
bimolecular association rate (kon)
of S15 binding, suggesting that S15 binds specifically
to the folded form of the three-way junction via a tertiary
structure capture mechanism.