4.7 Article

Evaluating and learning from RNA pseudotorsional space: Quantitative validation of a reduced representation for RNA structure

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 372, Issue 4, Pages 942-957

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2007.06.058

Keywords

RNA structure; reduced representation; pseudotorsions; Ramachandran; cluster analysis

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM50313, R01 GM050313-14, R01 GM050313] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NLM NIH HHS [T15 LM07056, T15 LM007056, T15 LM007056-22] Funding Source: Medline

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Quantitatively describing RNA structure and conformational elements remains a formidable problem. Seven standard torsion angles and the sugar pucker are necessary to characterize the conformation of an RNA nucleotide completely. Progress has been made toward understanding the discrete nature of RNA structure, but classifying simple and ubiquitous structural elements such as helices and motifs remains a difficult task. One approach for describing RNA structure in a simple, mathematically consistent, and computationally accessible manner involves the invocation of two pseudotorsions, eta (C4'(n-1), P-n, C4'(n), Pn+1) and theta (P-n, C4'(n), Pn+1, C4'(n+1)), which can be used to describe RNA conformation in much the same way that phi and psi are used to describe backbone configuration of proteins. Here, we conduct an exploration and statistical evaluation of pseuclotorsional space and of the Ramachandran-like eta-theta plot. We show that, through the rigorous quantitative analysis of the eta-theta plot, the pseudotorsional descriptors eta and theta, together with sugar pucker, are sufficient to describe RNA backbone conformation fully in most cases. These descriptors are also shown to contain considerable information about nucleotide base conformation, revealing a previously uncharacterized interplay between backbone and base orientation. A window function analysis is used to discern statistically relevant regions of density in the eta-theta scatter plot and then nucleotides in colocalized clusters in the eta-theta plane are shown to have similar 3-D structures through RMSD analysis of the RNA structural constituents. We find that major clusters in the eta-theta plot are few, underscoring the discrete nature of RNA backbone conformation. Like the Ramachandran plot, the eta-theta plot is a valuable system. for conceptualizing biomolecular conformation, it is a useful tool for analyzing RNA tertiary structures, and it is a vital component of new approaches for solving the 3-D structures of large RNA molecules and RNA assemblies. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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