Abstract

BackgroundA folding RNA molecule encounters multiple opportunities to form non-native yet energetically favorable pairings of nucleotide sequences. Given this forbidding free-energy landscape, mechanisms have evolved that contribute to a directed and efficient folding process, including catalytic proteins and error-detecting chaperones. Among structural RNA molecules we make a distinction between “bound” molecules, which are active as part of ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes, and “unbound,” with physiological functions performed without necessarily being bound in RNP complexes. We hypothesized that unbound molecules, lacking the partnering structure of a protein, would be more vulnerable than bound molecules to kinetic traps that compete with native stem structures. We defined an “ambiguity index”—a normalized function of the primary and secondary structure of an individual molecule that measures the number of kinetic traps available to nucleotide sequences that are paired in the native structure, presuming that unbound molecules would have lower indexes. The ambiguity index depends on the purported secondary structure, and was computed under both the comparative (“gold standard”) and an equilibrium-based prediction which approximates the minimum free energy (MFE) structure. Arguing that kinetically accessible metastable structures might be more biologically relevant than thermodynamic equilibrium structures, we also hypothesized that MFE-derived ambiguities would be less effective in separating bound and unbound molecules.ResultsWe have introduced an intuitive and easily computed function of primary and secondary structures that measures the availability of complementary sequences that could disrupt the formation of native stems on a given molecule—an ambiguity index. Using comparative secondary structures, the ambiguity index is systematically smaller among unbound than bound molecules, as expected. Furthermore, the effect is lost when the presumably more accurate comparative structure is replaced instead by the MFE structure.ConclusionsA statistical analysis of the relationship between the primary and secondary structures of non-coding RNA molecules suggests that stem-disrupting kinetic traps are substantially less prevalent in molecules not participating in RNP complexes. In that this distinction is apparent under the comparative but not the MFE secondary structure, the results highlight a possible deficiency in structure predictions when based upon assumptions of thermodynamic equilibrium.

Highlights

  • A folding RNA molecule encounters multiple opportunities to form non-native yet energetically favorable pairings of nucleotide sequences

  • Based on a calibrated version, αT-S(p, s), and employing the comparative secondary structure for s, we found support for the idea that non-coding RNA molecules in the unbound families, which are active absent participation in ribonucleoproteins, are more likely to have small ambiguity indexes than RNA molecules that operate exclusively as part of ribonucleoproteins

  • We examined the Group I and Group II introns, two families of molecules that are believed to perform some of their functions in an “unbound” state, to see if their ambiguity indexes were lower than might be expected were there no such evolutionary pressures to protect stem structures

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Summary

Introduction

A folding RNA molecule encounters multiple opportunities to form non-native yet energetically favorable pairings of nucleotide sequences. Zhou et al BMC Bioinformatics (2019) 20:666 accompanied by finely regulated transcription speeds, as well as a selection of proteins that may participate as stabilizers, catalysts, partners in a ribonculeoprotein complex, or chaperones to guide the process and detect errors It is not surprising, that many non-coding RNA molecules can be coxed into folding, properly, in artificial environments, the results rarely if ever match in vivo production in terms of speed or yield [3, 4, 9, 10]. The primary structures of RNA molecules typically afford many opportunities to form short or medium-length stems, most of which do not participate in the native structure This makes it hard for the computational biologist to accurately predict secondary structure, but might challenge the biological process to avoid these kinetic traps. Once formed, they require a large amount of energy (not to mention time) to be unformed

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