Abstract

BackgroundA widely used method to find conserved secondary structure in RNA is to first construct a multiple sequence alignment, and then fold the alignment, optimizing a score based on thermodynamics and covariance. This method works best around 75% sequence similarity. However, in a "twilight zone" below 55% similarity, the sequence alignment tends to obscure the covariance signal used in the second phase. Therefore, while the overall shape of the consensus structure may still be found, the degree of conservation cannot be estimated reliably.ResultsBased on a combination of available methods, we present a method named planACstar for improving structure conservation in structural alignments in the twilight zone. After constructing a consensus structure by alignment folding, planACstar abandons the original sequence alignment, refolds the sequences individually, but consistent with the consensus, aligns the structures, irrespective of sequence, by a pure structure alignment method, and derives an improved sequence alignment from the alignment of structures, to be re-submitted to alignment folding, etc.. This circle may be iterated as long as structural conservation improves, but normally, one step suffices.ConclusionsEmploying the tools ClustalW, RNAalifold, and RNAforester, we find that for sequences with 30-55% sequence identity, structural conservation can be improved by 10% on average, with a large variation, measured in terms of RNAalifold's own criterion, the structure conservation index.

Highlights

  • A widely used method to find conserved secondary structure in RNA is to first construct a multiple sequence alignment, and fold the alignment, optimizing a score based on thermodynamics and covariance

  • The score of Plan A diverges most from the reference alignment in a range of 30-55% sequence identity. In this "twilight zone", the performance of RNAalifold drops, which is expressed in a lower structure conservation index (SCI) [27]

  • Ci is the projection of the basepairs of the preliminary consensus C to a sequence Bi from the input set of size n, where 1 ≤ i ≤ n

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Summary

Results

Based on a combination of available methods, we present a method named planACstar for improving structure conservation in structural alignments in the twilight zone. After constructing a consensus structure by alignment folding, planACstar abandons the original sequence alignment, refolds the sequences individually, but consistent with the consensus, aligns the structures, irrespective of sequence, by a pure structure alignment method, and derives an improved sequence alignment from the alignment of structures, to be re-submitted to alignment folding, etc. This circle may be iterated as long as structural conservation improves, but normally, one step suffices

Conclusions
Background
Motivation
Results and Discussion
19. Hofacker IL
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