| Literature DB >> 20230605 |
Zasha Weinberg1, Joy X Wang, Jarrod Bogue, Jingying Yang, Keith Corbino, Ryan H Moy, Ronald R Breaker.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Structured noncoding RNAs perform many functions that are essential for protein synthesis, RNA processing, and gene regulation. Structured RNAs can be detected by comparative genomics, in which homologous sequences are identified and inspected for mutations that conserve RNA secondary structure.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20230605 PMCID: PMC2864571 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2010-11-3-r31
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Motifs identified in this work
| Motif | RNA? | Switch? | Taxa | Rfam | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6S-flavo | N | N | Bacteroidetes | RF01685 | |
| ? | y | ? | γ-Proteobacteria | ||
| Acido-1 | n | n | Acidobacteria | RF01686 | |
| Acido-Lenti-1 | n | n | Acidobacteria, Lentisphaerae | RF01687 | |
| Actino-pnp | Y | N | Actinomycetales | RF01688 | |
| AdoCbl-variant | Y | Y | Marine | RF01689 | |
| ? | ? | Lactobacillales | RF01732 | ||
| y | ? | δ-Proteobacteria | RF01733 | ||
| Bacillaceae-1 | n | n | Bacillaceae | RF01690 | |
| ? | n | RF01691 | |||
| Bacteroid- | y | n | Bacteroidetes | RF01692 | |
| Bacteroidales-1 | ? | ? | Bacteroidales | RF01693 | |
| ? | n | RF01694 | |||
| ? | n | n | |||
| Burkholderiales-1 | ? | ? | n | Burkholderiales | |
| c4 antisense RNA | N | N | Proteobacteria, phages | RF01695 | |
| c4-a1b1 | N | N | γ-Proteobacteria, phages | ||
| Chlorobi-1 | n | n | Chlorobi | RF01696 | |
| Chlorobi-RRM | y | n | Chlorobi | RF01697 | |
| Chloroflexi-1 | ? | n | RF01698 | ||
| Clostridiales-1 | n | n | Clostridiales, human gut | RF01699 | |
| COG2252 | ? | y | n | Pseudomonadales | |
| n | n | Actinobacteria, human gut | RF01700 | ||
| Y | Y | Widespread, bacteria and archaea | RF01734 | ||
| Cyano-1 | n | n | Cyanobacteria, marine | RF01701 | |
| Cyano-2 | n | n | Cyanobacteria, marine | RF01702 | |
| Desulfotalea-1 | ? | n | n | Proteobacteria | |
| Dictyoglomi-1 | ? | ? | Dictyoglomi | RF01703 | |
| Downstream-peptide | y | y | Cyanobacteria, marine | RF01704 | |
| y | y | Bacillales | RF01735 | ||
| ? | y | n | |||
| Flavo-1 | n | n | Bacteroidetes | RF01705 | |
| y | n | Rhizobiales | RF01736 | ||
| ? | n | Euryarchaeota | RF01737 | ||
| y | ? | RF01738 | |||
| Gamma- | ? | y | n | γ-Proteobacteria | |
| Y | y | Cyanobacteria, marine | RF01739 | ||
| GUCCY-hairpin | ? | ? | n | Bacteroidetes, Proteobacteria | |
| Gut-1 | n | n | Human gut only | RF01706 | |
| y | n | RF01740 | |||
| Y | ? | RF01741 | |||
| ? | y | n | |||
| JUMPstart | Y | ? | γ-Proteobacteria | RF01707 | |
| L17 downstream element | y | n | Lactobacillales, | RF01708 | |
| ? | n | Lactobacillales | RF01742 | ||
| Lacto- | ? | ? | n | Lactobacillales, phages | |
| Lacto- | y | n | Lactobacillales | RF01709 | |
| Lacto- | ? | ? | Lactobacillales | RF01710 | |
| Leu/phe leader | Y | N | RF01743 | ||
| y | ? | Pseudomonadales | RF01744 | ||
| Lnt | y | ? | Chlorobi | RF01711 | |
| Y | y | Marine, γ-Proteobacteria, cyanophage | RF01745 | ||
| n | n | RF01712 | |||
| Moco-II | Y | ? | Proteobacteria | RF01713 | |
| y | ? | Actinomycetales | RF01746 | ||
| Y | ? | Actinobacteria | RF01747 | ||
| ? | n | n | |||
| y | ? | Enterobacteriales (incl. | RF01748 | ||
| Ocean-V | n | n | Marine only | RF01714 | |
| Ocean-VI | ? | ? | ? | Marine only | |
| Y | ? | Chloroflexi, Firmicutes, δ-Proteobacteria | RF01749 | ||
| ? | n | RF01715 | |||
| Y | Y | Several phyla | RF01750 | ||
| ? | y | n | Actinobacteria | ||
| PhotoRC-I | y | n | Cyanobacteria, marine | RF01716 | |
| PhotoRC-II | y | n | Marine, cyanophage | RF01717 | |
| y | ? | Burkholderiales, fresh water/estuary | RF01718 | ||
| y | ? | Marine only | RF01751 | ||
| y | ? | Cyanobacteria | RF01752 | ||
| y | n | Cyanobacteria, marine | RF01753 | ||
| n | n | Pseudomonadales | RF01719 | ||
| ? | n | n | |||
| ? | y | ? | |||
| y | ? | RF01721 | |||
| Y | n | RF01720 | |||
| n | n | RF01722 | |||
| ? | y | n | |||
| y | ? | Proteobacteria | RF01754 | ||
| Rhizobiales-1 | ? | n | N | Rhizobiales | |
| Rhizobiales-2 | ? | n | Rhizobiales | RF01723 | |
| Rhodopirellula-1 | ? | y | ? | Proteobacteria, Planctomycetes | |
| y | ? | Pseudomonadales | RF01755 | ||
| y | N | Pseudomonadales | RF01756 | ||
| SAM-Chlorobi | Y | ? | Chlorobi | RF01724 | |
| SAM-I-IV-variant | Y | Y | Several phyla, marine | RF01725 | |
| SAM-II long loops | Y | Y | Bacteroidetes, marine | RF01726 | |
| SAM/SAH riboswitch | Y | Y | Rhodobacterales | RF01727 | |
| ? | n | n | |||
| ? | n | Burkholderiales | RF01757 | ||
| ScRE | ? | y | n | ||
| Soil-1 | ? | n | n | Soil only | |
| ? | n | n | |||
| STAXI | ? | n | Enterobacteriales | RF01728 | |
| y | ? | Pseudomonadales | RF01758 | ||
| Y | ? | γ-Proteobacteria | RF01759 | ||
| Termite- | y | n | Termite hind gut only | RF01729 | |
| Termite- | ? | ? | Termite hind gut only | RF01730 | |
| Y | n | Proteobacteria, | RF01760 | ||
| Transposase-resistance | ? | y | n | Several phyla | |
| TwoAYGGAY | n | n | Human gut, γ-Proteobacteria, Clostridiales | ||
| y | y | Marine, cyanophage | RF01761 | ||
| Whalefall-1 | n | n | Whalefall only | RF01762 | |
| Y | Y | Firmicutes | RF01764 | ||
| Y | y | Actinobacteria, δ-Proteobacteria | RF01763 | ||
Columns are as follows. "RNA?" : is this motif likely to represent a biological RNA? "Y" = certainly, "y" = probably, "?" = ambiguous, "n" = probably not, "N" = no. "cis-reg" : is the motif cis-regulatory? "switch?" : is the motif a riboswitch? Additional annotation and justification is in Additional File 2. "Taxa" : common taxon/taxa carrying this motif. Many motifs are discussed only in Additional file 1. "Rfam" : accession numbers of motifs that were submitted to the Rfam database for version 10.1. Note: consensus diagrams of some motifs were presented as supplementary data of a previous report [21] under simplified names: Acido-1 (previously ac-1), Dictyoglomi-1 (dct-1), Gut-1 (gt-1), manA (manA), Termite-flg (tf-1) and Whalefall-1 (wf-1).
Figure 1SAM/SAH riboswitches. (a) SAM/SAH motif consensus diagram. Possible additional base-pairing interactions are shown (Additional File 1). The legend applies to all other consensus diagrams in this report. (b) Sequence and proposed secondary structure of SK209-52 RNA. In-line probing annotations are derived from the data in c. Asterisks identify G residues added to improve in vitro transcription yield. (c) In-line probing gel with lanes loaded with 5' 32P-labeled RNAs subjected to no reaction (NR), partial digestion with RNase T1 (T1), partial digest under alkaline pH (-OH), in-line probing reaction without added compound (-), or in-line probing reactions with various concentrations of SAM. Selected bands in the RNase T1 partial digest lane (products of cleavage 3' of G residues) are numbered according to the nucleotide positions in b. Uncleaved precursor (Pre) and two internucleotide linkages whose cleavage rates are strongly affected by SAM (3' of nucleotides 42 and 45) are marked. The full gel image is provided in Additional File 1. (d) Plot of the normalized fraction of RNAs whose cleavage sites (linkage 23 not shown in c ) have undergone modulation versus the concentration of SAM present during the in-line probing reaction. The curve represents an ideal one-to-one binding interaction with a KD of 8.6 μM.
Figure 2Riboswitch candidates . Annotations are as described in Figure 1a. The transcription terminators that often overlap crcB or pfl RNAs are not depicted because they are not consistent in all representatives. They are annotated in Additional File 3. Question marks signify base-paired regions ("P4?" in yjdF, "P2?" in pfl, and "pseudoknot?" in manA) with weaker covariation or structural conservation. The pseudoknot in the epsC motif was predicted by others (Wade Winkler, personal communication, 2009). A portion of this figure was adapted from the supplementary data of a previous publication [21].
Figure 3Riboswitch candidates . Annotations are as described in Figure 1a. Purple lines and numbers indicate conserved sequences or structures common to the two motifs.
Figure 4Cyanobacterial motifs related to photosynthesis. Annotations are as described in Figure 1a.
Figure 5Examples of other candidate RNAs. Annotations are as described in Figure 1a. The Bacteroidales-1 motif has more conserved nucleotides than depicted (Additional File 6). A portion of this figure was adapted from the supplementary data of a previous publication [21].