Understanding structure-function relationships of RNA-binding proteins requires knowledge of how they bind RNAs in vivo. RNA-protein interactions are studied using light-induced cross-linking at "zerodistance", yielding nucleotide/amino-acid adducts for mass-spectrometry (MS)-based characterization.However, prerequisites for cross-linking are poorly understood, limiting interpretation of cross-linking data. Here, we report novel insights on cross-linking requirements from studying RBFOX-RRM domain bound to 13 C-labeled variants of its heptaribonucleotide binding element as a model. We probed the influence of nucleotide identity, sequence position and amino-acid composition using tandem-MS to assign cross-links at site-specific resolution. We observed cross-linking at three nucleotides, which were stacked onto phenylalanines. Surprisingly, this stacking was required for neighbouring aminoacids to cross-link, and is apparent in published RNA-protein datasets. We hypothesize that πstacking activates cross-linking via electron transfer, whereafter nucleotide-and peptide radicals, possibly stabilized by capto-dative effects, recombine. These findings should facilitate interpretation of cross-linking data from structural studies and genome-wide datasets. has also been observed with proteins that lack canonical RNA binding domains (RBDs) 1 . Taken together, these features render difficult the prediction of an RBP's substrates based only on a computational search for its consensus RBE. Indeed, recent studies of the RBFOX protein family showed that only one half of the isolated RNA targets contain the RBFOX consensus binding motif and that other motifs presumably bear responsibility for some of its splicing activities [10][11][12] .Many state-of-the-art methods to identify RNA-protein interactions in vivo employ RNA-protein crosslinking induced by UV light [13][14][15][16] . For example, by combining UV cross-linking with mass spectrometry approaches, proteins bound to given RNAs can be identified [17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] . Conversely, UV cross-linking and immunoprecipitation (CLIP) and related protocols are commonly used to identify RNA-binding sites for given proteins on a transcriptome-wide scale [25][26][27][28][29][30] . Technical advances constantly improve these techniques 18,31,32 , however, a long-standing challenge in structure/mechanism-oriented studies is to identify the points of cross-linking on both the RNA and the protein with site-specific resolution.Recently, we introduced cross-linking of segmentally isotope-labelled RNA and tandem mass spectrometry (CLIR-MS), which identifies the sites of amino acid/ribonucleotide cross-links in a single protocol 32 . In CLIR-MS, RNA regions that are suspected to interact with a protein are synthesized in isotopically labelled light-and heavy variants, so that nucleotides involved in cross-linking events appear as peak doublets in the resulting mass spectrum. By focusing on peak doublets during data analysis, cross-linked amino acids and nucleotides are reliabl...