| Literature DB >> 26581440 |
Robert Kleinkauf1, Torsten Houwaart2, Rolf Backofen3,4,5,6, Martin Mann7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many functional RNA molecules fold into pseudoknot structures, which are often essential for the formation of an RNA's 3D structure. Currently the design of RNA molecules, which fold into a specific structure (known as RNA inverse folding) within biotechnological applications, is lacking the feature of incorporating pseudoknot structures into the design. Hairpin-(H)- and kissing hairpin-(K)-type pseudoknots cover a wide range of biologically functional pseudoknots and can be represented on a secondary structure level.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26581440 PMCID: PMC4652366 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-015-0815-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1Schematic Terrain Graph Starting from a vertice v ∙, n subsequent vertices within the graph are visited by a single ant during its walk through the terrain in order to assemble an RNA sequence. For each visited vertex, a corresponding nucleotide information is incorporated to the corresponding position within the sequence. The specific vertex of position j is chosen probabilistic according to the set of edges leading away of the current vertex i. Hereby specific pheromone and terrain contributions of the edges influence the probabilities per position. The interplay of an increasing sequence constraint specificity and the applied inductive structure constraint determine the number of vertices for some sequence positions. For example, even though position m is labeled with an ‘N’ as sequence constraint, the position only has three vertices due to the sequence constraint of position 2 and its request to form a base pair with the nucleotide at position m. This leads to the removal of the ‘A’ nucleotide vertex in m, since this cannot base pair with neither ‘C’ nor ‘G’ at position 2
Fig. 2Pseudoknot Types a regular simple hairpin pseudoknot (H), b bulge hairpin pseudoknot (B), c complex hairpin pseudoknot (cH), d kissing hairpin pseudoknot (K). The complexity order is H
Fig. 3Constraint Compliance for Pseudoknot Categories. a GC-deviation of antaRNA for different , b Intrinsic GC values of MODENA using hotknots (orange) and IPknot (yellow), c Structural Distances of antaRNA (blue scaled for different ) and MODENA (yellow scaled) using hotknots and IPknot. For each tool, the targeted pseudoknot categories hairpin (H), bulge (B), complex hairpin (cH) and kissing hairpin (K) are illustrated