| Literature DB >> 17999775 |
Konstantin Yu Popadin1, Leila A Mamirova, Fyodor A Kondrashov.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial tRNAs have been the subject of study for structural biologists interested in their secondary structure characteristics, evolutionary biologists have researched patterns of compensatory and structural evolution and medical studies have been directed towards understanding the basis of human disease. However, an up to date, manually curated database of mitochondrially encoded tRNAs from higher animals is currently not available. DESCRIPTION: We obtained the complete mitochondrial sequence for 277 tetrapod species from GenBank and re-annotated all of the tRNAs based on a multiple alignment of each tRNA gene and secondary structure prediction made independently for each tRNA. The mitochondrial (mt) tRNA sequences and the secondary structure based multiple alignments are freely available as Supplemental Information online.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17999775 PMCID: PMC2206058 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-8-441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1The secondary structure of the human mt-tRNAAsn (a) and the multiple alignment with annotated secondary structure for selected species of mt-tRNAAsn (b, c). The "|" characters separate the loops and stems based on the accepted basic secondary structure of mt-tRNAs form Helm et al. (2000) while capital letters denote those nucleotides that are predicted by mfold to participate in WC or GU pairing in stem structures.
Figure 2The secondary structure of the the nine-banded armadillo mt-tRNACys (a), and the multiple alignment with annotated secondary structure for selected species of mt-tRNACys (b, c). The "|" characters separate the loops and stems based on the accepted basic secondary structure of mt-tRNAs form Helm et al. (2000) while capital letters denote those nucleotides that are predicted by mfold to participate in WC or GU pairing in stem structures. The secondary structure of mt-tRNASerAGY in our database resembles the one of the nine-banded armadillo mt-tRNACys (c).