The maturation or A-protein gene of single-stranded
RNA phage MS2 is preceded by a 130-nt long untranslated
leader. When MS2 RNA folding is at equilibrium, the gene
is untranslatable because the leader adopts a well-defined
cloverleaf structure in which the Shine–Dalgarno (SD)
sequence of the maturation gene is taken up in long-distance
base pairing with an upstream complementary sequence (UCS).
Synthesis of the A-protein takes place transiently while
the RNA is synthesized from the minus strand. This requires
that formation of the inhibitory cloverleaf is slow. In
vitro, the folding delay was on the order of minutes. Here,
we present evidence that this postponed folding is caused
by the formation of a metastable intermediate. This intermediate
is a small local hairpin that contains the UCS in its loop,
thereby preventing or slowing down its pairing with the
SD sequence. Mutants in which the small hairpin could not
be formed made no detectable amounts of A-protein and were
barely viable. Apparently, here the cloverleaf formed quicker
than ribosomes could bind. On the other hand, mutants in
which the small intermediary hairpin was stabilized produced
more A-protein than wild type and were viable. One hardly
growing mutant that could not form the metastable hairpin
and did not make detectable amounts of A-protein was evolved.
The emerging pseudo-revertant had selected two second site
repressor mutations that allowed reconstruction of a variant
of the metastable intermediate. The pseudo-revertant had
also regained the capacity to produce the A-protein.