4.7 Article

3DNA: a versatile, integrated software system for the analysis, rebuilding and visualization of three-dimensional nucleic-acid structures

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 3, Issue 7, Pages 1213-1227

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2008.104

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U. S. Public Health Service [GM20861]
  2. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [R37GM020861, R01GM020861] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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We present a set of protocols showing how to use the 3DNA suite of programs to analyze, rebuild and visualize three-dimensional nucleic-acid structures. The software determines a wide range of conformational parameters, including the identities and rigid-body parameters of interacting bases and base-pair steps, the nucleotides comprising helical fragments, the area of overlap of stacked bases and so on. The reconstruction of three-dimensional structure takes advantage of rigorously defined rigid-body parameters, producing rectangular block representations of the nucleic-acid bases and base pairs and all-atom models with approximate sugar phosphate backbones. The visualization components create vector-based drawings and scenes that can be rendered as raster-graphics images, allowing for easy generation of publication-quality figures. The utility programs use geometric variables to control the view and scale of an object, for comparison of related structures. The commands run in seconds even for large structures. The software and related information are available at http://3dna.rutgers.edu/.

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