scholarly journals Diagrammatic Approaches to RNA Structures with Trinucleotide Repeats

Author(s):  
Chi H. Mak ◽  
Ethan N.H. Phan
Biochemistry ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 44 (32) ◽  
pp. 10873-10882 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magdalena Broda ◽  
Elżbieta Kierzek ◽  
Zofia Gdaniec ◽  
Tadeusz Kulinski ◽  
Ryszard Kierzek

2021 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 3409-3426
Author(s):  
Arancha Catalan-Moreno ◽  
Marta Cela ◽  
Pilar Menendez-Gil ◽  
Naiara Irurzun ◽  
Carlos J Caballero ◽  
...  

Abstract Thermoregulation of virulence genes in bacterial pathogens is essential for environment-to-host transition. However, the mechanisms governing cold adaptation when outside the host remain poorly understood. Here, we found that the production of cold shock proteins CspB and CspC from Staphylococcus aureus is controlled by two paralogous RNA thermoswitches. Through in silico prediction, enzymatic probing and site-directed mutagenesis, we demonstrated that cspB and cspC 5′UTRs adopt alternative RNA structures that shift from one another upon temperature shifts. The open (O) conformation that facilitates mRNA translation is favoured at ambient temperatures (22°C). Conversely, the alternative locked (L) conformation, where the ribosome binding site (RBS) is sequestered in a double-stranded RNA structure, is folded at host-related temperatures (37°C). These structural rearrangements depend on a long RNA hairpin found in the O conformation that sequesters the anti-RBS sequence. Notably, the remaining S. aureus CSP, CspA, may interact with a UUUGUUU motif located in the loop of this long hairpin and favour the folding of the L conformation. This folding represses CspB and CspC production at 37°C. Simultaneous deletion of the cspB/cspC genes or their RNA thermoswitches significantly decreases S. aureus growth rate at ambient temperatures, highlighting the importance of CspB/CspC thermoregulation when S. aureus transitions from the host to the environment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Svetlana Kalmykova ◽  
Marina Kalinina ◽  
Stepan Denisov ◽  
Alexey Mironov ◽  
Dmitry Skvortsov ◽  
...  

AbstractThe ability of nucleic acids to form double-stranded structures is essential for all living systems on Earth. Current knowledge on functional RNA structures is focused on locally-occurring base pairs. However, crosslinking and proximity ligation experiments demonstrated that long-range RNA structures are highly abundant. Here, we present the most complete to-date catalog of conserved complementary regions (PCCRs) in human protein-coding genes. PCCRs tend to occur within introns, suppress intervening exons, and obstruct cryptic and inactive splice sites. Double-stranded structure of PCCRs is supported by decreased icSHAPE nucleotide accessibility, high abundance of RNA editing sites, and frequent occurrence of forked eCLIP peaks. Introns with PCCRs show a distinct splicing pattern in response to RNAPII slowdown suggesting that splicing is widely affected by co-transcriptional RNA folding. The enrichment of 3’-ends within PCCRs raises the intriguing hypothesis that coupling between RNA folding and splicing could mediate co-transcriptional suppression of premature pre-mRNA cleavage and polyadenylation.


Methods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Si-Kun Guo ◽  
Fang Nan ◽  
Chu-Xiao Liu ◽  
Li Yang ◽  
Ling-Ling Chen

2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (50) ◽  
pp. 44231-44240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiao Li ◽  
Yalan Liu ◽  
Xiaoqian Zhu ◽  
Gang Chang ◽  
Hanping He ◽  
...  

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