The inherent chemical instability of RNA under
physiological conditions is primarily due to the spontaneous
cleavage of phosphodiester linkages via intramolecular
transesterification reactions. Although the protonation
state of the nucleophilic 2′-hydroxyl group is a
critical determinant of the rate of RNA cleavage, the precise
geometry of the chemical groups that comprise each internucleotide
linkage also has a significant impact on cleavage activity.
Specifically, transesterification is expected to be proportional
to the relative in-line character of the linkage. We have
examined the rates of spontaneous cleavage of various RNAs
for which the secondary and tertiary structures have previously
been modeled using either NMR or X-ray crystallographic
data. Rate constants determined for the spontaneous cleavage
of different RNA linkages vary by almost 10,000-fold, most
likely reflecting the contribution that secondary and tertiary
structures make towards the overall chemical stability
of RNA. Moreover, a correlation is observed between RNA
cleavage rate and the relative in-line fitness of each
internucleotide linkage. One linkage located within an
ATP-binding RNA aptamer is predicted to adopt most closely
the ideal conformation for in-line attack. This linkage
has a rate constant for transesterification that is ∼12-fold
greater than is observed for an unconstrained linkage and
was found to be the most labile among a total of 136 different
sites examined. The implications of this relationship for
the chemical stability of RNA and for the mechanisms of
nucleases and ribozymes are discussed.