Abstract

A major difficulty in the evaluation of secondary and tertiary structures of nucleic acids is the lack of convenient methods for their construction and representation. As a first step in a study of the symbolic representation of biopolymers, we report the development of a structure editor written in Pascal, permitting model construction on the screen of a personal computer. The program calculates energies for helical regions, allows user-defined helices and displays the secondary structure of a nucleic acid based on a user-selected set of helices. Screen and printer outputs can be in the form of a backbone or the letters of the primary sequence. The molecule can then be displayed in a format which simulates its three-dimensional structure. Using appropriate glasses, the molecule can be viewed on the screen in three dimensions. Other options include the manipulation of helices and single-stranded regions which results in changes in the spatial relationship between different regions of the molecule. The editor requires an IBM or compatible PC, 640 kbyte memory and a medium or high resolution graphics card.

Full Text
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