RESUMEN
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is a polymeric molecule that is fundamental to biological processes, with structure being more highly conserved than primary sequence and often key to its function. Advances in RNA structure characterization have resulted in an increase in the number of accurate secondary structures. The task of uncovering common RNA structural motifs with a collective function through structural comparison, providing a level of similarity, remains challenging and could be used to improve RNA secondary structure databases and discover new RNA families. In this work, we present a novel secondary structure alignment method, bpRNA-align. bpRNA-align is a customized global structural alignment method, utilizing an inverted (gap extend costs more than gap open) and context-specific affine gap penalty along with a structural, feature-specific substitution matrix to provide similarity scores. We evaluate our similarity scores in comparison to other methods, using affinity propagation clustering, applied to a benchmarking data set of known structure types. bpRNA-align shows improvement in clustering performance over a broad range of structure types.
Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , ARN , Humanos , ARN/genética , ARN/química , Conformación de Ácido Nucleico , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Análisis por Conglomerados , Programas InformáticosRESUMEN
Many critical life processes are regulated by input from 24-hour external light/dark cycles, such as metabolism, cellular homeostasis, and detoxification. The circadian clock, which helps coordinate the response to these diurnal light/dark cycles, remains rhythmic across lifespan; however, rhythmic transcript expression is altered during normal aging. To better understand how aging impacts diurnal expression, we present an improved Fourier-based method for detecting and visualizing rhythmicity that is based on the relative power of the 24-hour period compared to other periods (RP24). We apply RP24 to transcript-level expression profiles from the heads of young (5-day) and old (55-day) Drosophila melanogaster, and reveal novel age-dependent rhythmicity changes that may be masked at the gene level. We show that core clock transcripts phase advance during aging, while most rhythmic transcripts phase delay. Transcripts rhythmic only in young flies tend to peak before lights on, while transcripts only rhythmic in old peak after lights on. We show that several pathways, including glutathione metabolism, gain or lose coordinated rhythmic expression with age, providing insight into possible mechanisms of age-onset neurodegeneration. Remarkably, we find that many pathways show very robust coordinated rhythms across lifespan, highlighting their putative roles in promoting neural health. We investigate statistically enriched transcription factor binding site motifs that may be involved in these rhythmicity changes.
RESUMEN
The nucleocapsid (N) protein of SARS-CoV-2 binds viral RNA, condensing it inside the virion, and phase separating with RNA to form liquid-liquid condensates. There is little consensus on what differentiates sequence-independent N-RNA interactions in the virion or in liquid droplets from those with specific genomic RNA (gRNA) motifs necessary for viral function inside infected cells. To identify the RNA structures and the N domains responsible for specific interactions and phase separation, we use the first 1,000 nt of viral RNA and short RNA segments designed as models for single-stranded and paired RNA. Binding affinities estimated from fluorescence anisotropy of these RNAs to the two-folded domains of N (the NTD and CTD) and comparison to full-length N demonstrate that the NTD binds preferentially to single-stranded RNA, and while it is the primary RNA-binding site, it is not essential to phase separation. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy identifies two RNA-binding sites on the NTD: a previously characterized site and an additional although weaker RNA-binding face that becomes prominent when binding to the primary site is weak, such as with dsRNA or a binding-impaired mutant. Phase separation assays of nucleocapsid domains with double-stranded and single-stranded RNA structures support a model where multiple weak interactions, such as with the CTD or the NTD's secondary face promote phase separation, while strong, specific interactions do not. These studies indicate that both strong and multivalent weak N-RNA interactions underlie the multifunctional abilities of N.