952 resultados para Rna Secondary Structures


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PCR amplification of template DNAs extracted from mixed, naturally occurring microbial populations, using oligonucleotide primers complementary to highly conserved sequences, was used to obtain a large collection of diverse RNase P RNA-encoding genes. An alignment of these sequences was used in a comparative analysis of RNase P RNA secondary and tertiary structure. The new sequences confirm the secondary structure model based on sequences from cultivated organisms (with minor alterations in helices P12 and P18), providing additional support for nearly every base pair. Analysis of sequence covariation using the entire RNase P RNA data set reveals elements of tertiary structure in the RNA; the third nucleotides (underlined) of the GNRA tetraloops L14 and L18 are seen to interact with adjacent Watson-Crick base pairs in helix P8, forming A:G/C or G:A/U base triples. These experiments demonstrate one way in which the enormous diversity of natural microbial populations can be used to elucidate molecular structure through comparative analysis.

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Recent developments in multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy and large-scale synthesis of uniformly 13C- and 15N-labeled oligonucleotides have greatly improved the prospects for determination of the solution structure of RNA. However, there are circumstances in which it may be advantageous to label only a segment of the entire RNA chain. For example, in a larger RNA molecule the structural question of interest may reside in a localized domain. Labeling only the corresponding nucleotides simplifies the spectrum and resonance assignments because one can filter proton spectra for coupling to 13C and 15N. Another example is in resolving alternative secondary structure models that are indistinguishable in imino proton connectivities. Here we report a general method for enzymatic synthesis of quantities of segmentally labeled RNA molecules required for NMR spectroscopy. We use the method to distinguish definitively two competing secondary structure models for the 5' half of Caenorhabditis elegans spliced leader RNA by comparison of the two-dimensional [15N] 1H heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation spectrum of the uniformly labeled sample with that of a segmentally labeled sample. The method requires relatively small samples; solutions in the 200-300 microM concentration range, with a total of 30 nmol or approximately 40 micrograms of RNA in approximately 150 microliters, give strong NMR signals in a short accumulation time. The method can be adapted to label an internal segment of a larger RNA chain for study of localized structural problems. This definitive approach provides an alternative to the more common enzymatic and chemical footprinting methods for determination of RNA secondary structure.

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The tendency of a polypeptide chain to form alpha-helical or beta-strand secondary structure depends upon local and nonlocal effects. Local effects reflect the intrinsic propensities of the amino acid residues for particular secondary structures, while nonlocal effects reflect the positioning of the individual residues in the context of the entire amino acid sequence. In particular, the periodicity of polar and nonpolar residues specifies whether a given sequence is consistent with amphiphilic alpha-helices or beta-strands. The importance of intrinsic propensities was compared to that of polar/nonpolar periodicity by a direct competition. Synthetic peptides were designed using residues with intrinsic propensities that favored one or the other type of secondary structure. The polar/nonpolar periodicities of the peptides were designed either to be consistent with the secondary structure favored by the intrinsic propensities of the component residues or in other cases to oppose these intrinsic propensities. Characterization of the synthetic peptides demonstrated that in all cases the observed secondary structure correlates with the periodicity of the peptide sequence--even when this secondary structure differs from that predicted from the intrinsic propensities of the component amino acids. The observed secondary structures are concentration dependent, indicating that oligomerization of the amphiphilic peptides is responsible for the observed secondary structures. Thus, for self-assembling oligomeric peptides, the polar/nonpolar periodicity can overwhelm the intrinsic propensities of the amino acid residues and serves as the major determinant of peptide secondary structure.

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The genetic code is based on aminoacylation reactions where specific amino acids are attached to tRNAs bearing anticodon trinucleotides. However, the anticodon-independent specific aminoacylation of RNA minihelix substrates by bacterial and yeast tRNA synthetases suggested an operational RNA code for amino acids whereby specific RNA sequences/structures in tRNA acceptor stems correspond to specific amino acids. Because of the possible significance of the operational RNA code for the development of the genetic code, we investigated aminoacylation of synthetic RNA minihelices with a human enzyme to understand the sequences needed for that aminoacylation compared with those needed for a microbial system. We show here that the species-specific aminoacylation of glycine tRNAs is recapitulated by a species-specific aminoacylation of minihelices. Although the mammalian and Escherichia coli minihelices differ at 6 of 12 base pairs, two of the three nucleotides essential for aminoacylation by the E. coli enzyme are conserved in the mammalian minihelix. The two conserved nucleotides were shown to be also important for aminoacylation of the mammalian minihelix by the human enzyme. A simple interchange of the differing nucleotide enabled the human enzyme to now charge the bacterial substrate and not the mammalian minihelix. Conversely, this interchange made the bacterial enzyme specific for the mammalian substrate. Thus, the positional locations (if not the actual nucleotides) for the operational RNA code for glycine appear conserved from bacteria to mammals.

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Cystic fibrosis is caused by mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene, which encodes a chloride channel present in many cells. In cardiomyocytes, we report that multiple exon 1 usage and alternative splicing produces four CFTR transcripts, with different 5'-untranslated regions, CFTRTRAD-139, CFTR-1C/-1A, CFTR-1C, and CFTR-1B. CFTR transcripts containing the novel upstream exons (exons -1C, -1B, and -1A) represent more than 90% of cardiac expressed CFTR mRNA. Regulation of cardiac CFTR expression, in response to developmental and pathological stimuli, is exclusively due to the modulation of CFTR-1C and CFTR-1C/-1A expression. Upstream open reading frames have been identified in the 5'-untranslated regions of all CFTR transcripts that, in conjunction with adjacent stem-loop structures, modulate the efficiency of translation initiation at the AUG codon of the main CFTR coding region in CFTRTRAD-139 and CFTR-1C/-1A transcripts. Exon(-1A), only present in CFTR-1C/-1A transcripts, encodes an AUG codon that is in-frame with the main CFTR open reading frame, the efficient translation of which produces a novel CFTR protein isoform with a curtailed amino terminus. As the expression of this CFTR transcript parallels the spatial and temporal distribution of the cAMP-activated whole-cell current density in normal and diseased hearts, we suggest that CFTR-1C/-1A provides the molecular basis for the cardiac cAMP-activated chloride channel. Our findings provide further insight into the complex nature of in vivo CFTR expression, to which multiple mRNA transcripts, protein isoforms, and post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms are now added.

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Kunjin virus is a member of the Flavivirus genus and is an Australian variant of West Nile virus. The C-terminal domain of the Kunjin virus NS3 protein displays helicase activity. The protein is thought to separate daughter and template RNA strands, assisting the initiation of replication by unwinding RNA secondary structure in the 3' nontranslated region. Expression, purification and preliminary crystallographic characterization of the NS3 helicase domain are reported. It is shown that Kunjin virus helicase may adopt a dimeric assembly in absence of nucleic acids, oligomerization being a means to provide the helicases with multiple nucleic acid-binding capability, facilitating translocation along the RNA strands. Kunjin virus NS3 helicase domain is an attractive model for studying the molecular mechanisms of flavivirus replication, while simultaneously providing a new basis for the rational development of anti-flaviviral compounds.

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In isolation and characterization studies, expression level U1 and U2 snRNA isoforms were obtained from the 5th instar larval stage silk gland (SG). The DNA content of the SG cells is approximately 200,000-fold higher compared to the usual (2N) somatic cells of B. mori due to endoreduplication. In this study, the existence of U1 and U2 snRNA isoforms in the SG of the organism is investigated. Bombyx mori U1 and U2-specific RT-PCR libraries from the silk gland were generated. Five U1 and eight U2 isoforms were isolated and characterized. Nucleotide differences, structural alterations, as well as protein and RNA interaction sites were analyzed in these variants. For the U1 snRNA variants, they were compared to the previously reported BmN isoforms. In all these U-snRNA variants, polymorphic sites do not predominate at the core of known functional sequences, which were interspecifically conserved. Variant sites and inter-species differences are located in moderately conserved regions. Free energy (ΔG) values for the entire U1 and U2 snRNA secondary structures and for the individual stem/loops domains of the isoforms were generated and compared to determine their structural stability. This will be the first time that U1 and U2 variants are shown specific for a development stage (larval) other than embryonic or adult. ^ Using phylogenetic analysis, evolutionary trees were generated for the U1 and U2 snRNAs using animal, plant, protista and fungal species. The resulting trees were boostrapped for robustness and rooted with the self-splicing RNA group II intron sequence from the cyanobacterium Calothrix. Using phylogenetic analyses, possible structural and functional evolutionary interdependence between the U1 and U2 snRNAs was investigated. ^

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Les ribozymes sont des ARN catalytiques fréquemment exploités pour le développement d’outils biochimiques et d’agents thérapeutiques. Ils sont particulièrement intéressants pour effectuer l’inactivation de gènes, en permettant la dégradation d’ARNm ou d’ARN viraux associés à des maladies. Les ribozymes les plus utilisés en ce moment pour le développement d’agents thérapeutiques sont les ribozymes hammerhead et hairpin, qui permettent la reconnaissance spécifique d’ARN simple brin par la formation de structures secondaires stables. In vivo, la majorité des ARN adoptent des structures secondaires et tertiaires complexes et les régions simples brins sont parfois difficiles d’accès. Il serait intéressant de pouvoir cibler des ARN repliés et un motif d’ARN intéressant à cibler est la tige-boucle d’ARN qui peut être importante dans le repliement global des ARN et pour accomplir des fonctions biologiques. Le ribozyme VS de Neurospora fait la reconnaissance de son substrat replié en tigeboucle de façon spécifique par une interaction kissing-loop, mais il n’a jamais été exploité pour faire la reconnaissance d’un ARN cible très différent de son substrat naturel. Le but des travaux présentés dans cette thèse est de déterminer si le ribozyme VS possède l’adaptabilité nécessaire pour l’ingénierie de ribozymes qui clivent des ARN cibles différents du substrat naturel. Dans le cadre de cette thèse, le ribozyme VS a été modifié pour l’adapter à différents substrats et des études de cinétiques ont été réalisées pour évaluer l’impact de ces modifications sur l’activité de clivage du ribozyme. Dans un premier temps, le ribozyme a été modifié pour faire la reconnaissance et le clivage de substrats possédant différentes longueurs de tiges Ib. Le ribozyme a été adapté avec succès à ces substrats de différentes longueurs de tige Ib, avec une activité qui est similaire à celle du ribozyme avec un substrat sans modification. Dans un deuxième temps, c’est l’interaction kissing-loop I/V du ribozyme qui a été substituée de façon rationnelle, dans le but de savoir si un ribozyme VS mutant peut reconnaitre et cliver un substrat ayant une boucle différente de celle de son substrat naturel. L’interaction kissing-loop I/V a été substituée pour les interactions kissing-loop TAR/TAR* de l’ARN du VIH-1 et L22/L88 de l’ARN 23S de Deinococcus radiodurans. La réaction de iii clivage des ribozymes comportant ces nouvelles interactions kissing-loop est toujours observée, mais avec une activité diminuée. Finalement, la sélection in vitro (SELEX) de ribozymes a été effectuée pour permettre un clivage plus efficace d’un substrat mutant avec une nouvelle boucle. Le SELEX a permis la sélection d’un ribozyme qui clive un substrat avec une boucle terminale mutée pour celle de l’ARN TAR du VIH-1 et cela avec une activité de clivage très efficace. L’ensemble de ces études démontre que le ribozyme VS peut être modifié de diverses façons pour la reconnaissance spécifique de différents substrats, tout en conservant une bonne activité de clivage. Ces résultats montrent le grand potentiel d’ingénierie du ribozyme VS et sont prometteurs pour la poursuite d’études d’ingénierie du ribozyme VS, en vue du clivage d’ARN cibles repliés en tige-boucle complètement différents du substrat naturel du ribozyme VS.

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Shrimp farming is one of the activities that contribute most to the growth of global aquaculture. However, this business has undergone significant economic losses due to the onset of viral diseases such as Infectious Myonecrosis (IMN). The IMN is already widespread throughout Northeastern Brazil and affects other countries such as Indonesia, Thailand and China. The main symptom of disease is myonecrosis, which consists of necrosis of striated muscles of the abdomen and cephalothorax of shrimp. The IMN is caused by infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV), a non-enveloped virus which has protrusions along its capsid. The viral genome consists of a single molecule of double-stranded RNA and has two Open Reading Frames (ORFs). The ORF1 encodes the major capsid protein (MCP) and a potential RNA binding protein (RBP). ORF2 encodes a probable RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) and classifies IMNV in Totiviridae family. Thus, the objective of this research was study the IMNV complete genome and encoded proteins in order to develop a system differentiate virus isolates based on polymorphisms presence. The phylogenetic relationship among some totivirus was investigated and showed a new group to IMNV within Totiviridae family. Two new genomes were sequenced, analyzed and compared to two other genomes already deposited in GenBank. The new genomes were more similar to each other than those already described. Conserved and variable regions of the genome were identified through similarity graphs and alignments using the four IMNV sequences. This analyze allowed mapping of polymorphic sites and revealed that the most variable region of the genome is in the first half of ORF1, which coincides with the regions that possibly encode the viral protrusion, while the most stable regions of the genome were found in conserved domains of proteins that interact with RNA. Moreover, secondary structures were predicted for all proteins using various softwares and protein structural models were calculated using threading and ab initio modeling approaches. From these analyses was possible to observe that the IMNV proteins have motifs and shapes similar to proteins of other totiviruses and new possible protein functions have been proposed. The genome and proteins study was essential for development of a PCR-based detection system able to discriminate the four IMNV isolates based on the presence of polymorphic sites

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Les ribozymes sont des ARN catalytiques fréquemment exploités pour le développement d’outils biochimiques et d’agents thérapeutiques. Ils sont particulièrement intéressants pour effectuer l’inactivation de gènes, en permettant la dégradation d’ARNm ou d’ARN viraux associés à des maladies. Les ribozymes les plus utilisés en ce moment pour le développement d’agents thérapeutiques sont les ribozymes hammerhead et hairpin, qui permettent la reconnaissance spécifique d’ARN simple brin par la formation de structures secondaires stables. In vivo, la majorité des ARN adoptent des structures secondaires et tertiaires complexes et les régions simples brins sont parfois difficiles d’accès. Il serait intéressant de pouvoir cibler des ARN repliés et un motif d’ARN intéressant à cibler est la tige-boucle d’ARN qui peut être importante dans le repliement global des ARN et pour accomplir des fonctions biologiques. Le ribozyme VS de Neurospora fait la reconnaissance de son substrat replié en tigeboucle de façon spécifique par une interaction kissing-loop, mais il n’a jamais été exploité pour faire la reconnaissance d’un ARN cible très différent de son substrat naturel. Le but des travaux présentés dans cette thèse est de déterminer si le ribozyme VS possède l’adaptabilité nécessaire pour l’ingénierie de ribozymes qui clivent des ARN cibles différents du substrat naturel. Dans le cadre de cette thèse, le ribozyme VS a été modifié pour l’adapter à différents substrats et des études de cinétiques ont été réalisées pour évaluer l’impact de ces modifications sur l’activité de clivage du ribozyme. Dans un premier temps, le ribozyme a été modifié pour faire la reconnaissance et le clivage de substrats possédant différentes longueurs de tiges Ib. Le ribozyme a été adapté avec succès à ces substrats de différentes longueurs de tige Ib, avec une activité qui est similaire à celle du ribozyme avec un substrat sans modification. Dans un deuxième temps, c’est l’interaction kissing-loop I/V du ribozyme qui a été substituée de façon rationnelle, dans le but de savoir si un ribozyme VS mutant peut reconnaitre et cliver un substrat ayant une boucle différente de celle de son substrat naturel. L’interaction kissing-loop I/V a été substituée pour les interactions kissing-loop TAR/TAR* de l’ARN du VIH-1 et L22/L88 de l’ARN 23S de Deinococcus radiodurans. La réaction de iii clivage des ribozymes comportant ces nouvelles interactions kissing-loop est toujours observée, mais avec une activité diminuée. Finalement, la sélection in vitro (SELEX) de ribozymes a été effectuée pour permettre un clivage plus efficace d’un substrat mutant avec une nouvelle boucle. Le SELEX a permis la sélection d’un ribozyme qui clive un substrat avec une boucle terminale mutée pour celle de l’ARN TAR du VIH-1 et cela avec une activité de clivage très efficace. L’ensemble de ces études démontre que le ribozyme VS peut être modifié de diverses façons pour la reconnaissance spécifique de différents substrats, tout en conservant une bonne activité de clivage. Ces résultats montrent le grand potentiel d’ingénierie du ribozyme VS et sont prometteurs pour la poursuite d’études d’ingénierie du ribozyme VS, en vue du clivage d’ARN cibles repliés en tige-boucle complètement différents du substrat naturel du ribozyme VS.

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The double-stranded conformation of cellular DNA is a central aspect of DNA stabilisation and protection. The helix preserves the genetic code against chemical and enzymatic degradation, metabolic activation, and formation of secondary structures. However, there are various instances where single-stranded DNA is exposed, such as during replication or transcription, in the synthesis of chromosome ends, and following DNA damage. In these instances, single-stranded DNA binding proteins are essential for the sequestration and processing of single-stranded DNA. In order to bind single-stranded DNA, these proteins utilise a characteristic and evolutionary conserved single-stranded DNA-binding domain, the oligonucleotide/oligosaccharide-binding (OB)-fold. In the current review we discuss a subset of these proteins involved in the direct maintenance of genomic stability, an important cellular process in the conservation of cellular viability and prevention of malignant transformation. We discuss the central roles of single-stranded DNA binding proteins from the OB-fold domain family in DNA replication, the restart of stalled replication forks, DNA damage repair, cell cycle-checkpoint activation, and telomere maintenance.

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To characterize aphid mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) features, we sequenced the complete mitogenome of the Russian wheat aphid, Diuraphis noxia. The 15,784-bp mitogenome with a high A + T content (84.76%) and strong C skew (− 0.26) was arranged in the same gene order as that of the ancestral insect. Unlike typical insect mitogenomes, D. noxia possessed a large tandem repeat region (644 bp) located between trnE and trnF. Sequencing partial mitogenome of the cotton aphid (Aphis gossypii) further confirmed the presence of the large repeat region in aphids, but with different repeat length and copy number. Another motif (58 bp) tandemly repeated 2.3 times in the control region of D. noxia. All repeat units in D. noxia could be folded into stem-loop secondary structures, which could further promote an increase in copy numbers. Characterization of the D. noxia mitogenome revealed distinct mitogenome architectures, thus advancing our understanding of insect mitogenomic diversities and evolution.

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We determined the nucleotide sequence of the mitochondrial genome (mtgenome) of Spilonota lechriaspis Meyrick (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). The entire closed circular molecule is 15,368 bp and contains 37 genes with the typical gene complement and order for lepidopteran mtgenomes. All tRNAs except tRNASer(AGN) can be folded into the typical cloverleaf secondary structures. The protein-coding genes (PCGs) have typical mitochondrial start codons, with the exception of COI, which uses the unusual CGA one as is found in all other Lepidoptera sequenced to date. In addition, six of 13 PCGs harbor the incomplete termination codons, a single T. The A+T-rich region contains some conserved structures that are similar to those found in other lepidopteran mtgenomes, including a structure combining the motif 'ATAGA', a 19-bp poly(T) stretch and three microsatellite (AT)n elements which are part of larger 122+ bp macrorepeats. This is the first report of macrorepeats in a lepidopteran mtgenome.

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Coleoptera is the most diverse group of insects with over 360,000 described species divided into four suborders: Adephaga, Archostemata, Myxophaga, and Polyphaga. In this study, we present six new complete mitochondrial genome (mtgenome) descriptions, including a representative of each suborder, and analyze the evolution of mtgenomes from a comparative framework using all available coleopteran mtgenomes. We propose a modification of atypical cox1 start codons based on sequence alignment to better reflect the conservation observed across species as well as findings of TTG start codons in other genes. We also analyze tRNA-Ser(AGN) anticodons, usually GCU in arthropods, and report a conserved UCU anticodon as a possible synapomorphy across Polyphaga. We further analyze the secondary structure of tRNA-Ser(AGN) and present a consensus structure and an updated covariance model that allows tRNAscan-SE (via the COVE software package) to locate and fold these atypical tRNAs with much greater consistency. We also report secondary structure predictions for both rRNA genes based on conserved stems. All six species of beetle have the same gene order as the ancestral insect. We report noncoding DNA regions, including a small gap region of about 20 bp between tRNA-Ser(UCN) and nad1 that is present in all six genomes, and present results of a base composition analysis.