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Organization of RNA structural motifs: Lessons from SCOR

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1 Organization of RNA structural motifs: Lessons from SCOR
Donna K. Hendrix Department of Plant and Microbial Biology University of California, Berkeley and Physical Biosciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

2 Structural classification of RNA http://scor.lbl.gov
Search by PDB or NDB id primary sequence key word Directed Acyclic Graph Architecture SCOR 1.2 location, and what it looks like. SCOR lives today.

3 Classification principles
Base pairing Watson Crick non-canonical Base stacking Backbone conformation Sequence Backbone interactions backbone-backbone backbone-base

4 SCOR 2.0 classification Tertiary interactions Ribose zippers
Structural classification Hairpin loops Internal loops Tertiary interactions Ribose zippers Coaxial helices, Tetraloop-receptor, A-minor motif, Kissing hairpin, Pseudoknots Functional classification Molecular function Motif function Structural models Add location Functional classification

5 RNA structural classification
Conserved patterns and relationships sequence structure Organize data for non-specialist Classification for RNA model-building, engineering

6 How to give yourself eye strain
SCOR update: 102 new structures 20 structures removed from SCOR 2.0.2 85 structures previously in SCOR but not functionally annotated Moved server from LBL; cleaned up the code a little bit; upgraded OS/tomcat; Eric added apache services.

7 What defines an RNA structural motif?
Conserved, repeated structural features sequence fold (backbone, stacking) interactions (hydrogen bonds, stacking)

8 Primary structure Identify by Specify by sequence:
conservation of sequence binding or stability Specify by sequence: GUAUGA (Box C of C/D Box snoRNA) CUCAGUACGAGAGGAAC (sarcin-ricin loop) M. Tamura and S.R Holbrook JMB 320:455 (2002)

9 Secondary structure motifs
Specify by Watson Crick base pairing internal loops hairpin loops junction loops some tertiary interactions (pseudoknots) 1euy, Sherlin, et. Al. JMB 299:431 (2000)

10 Structural, or 3-d motifs
Distinguished from secondary structural motifs by three-dimensional features and interactions bases: pairing, stacking, base-backbone backbone: backbone-backbone, torsion angles (including chi), pseudotorsion Described by sequence, secondary structure features as well 1euy, Sherlin, et. Al. JMB 299:431 (2000)

11 Organization of structural motifs: hierarchical classification from SCOR 1.1 and 1.2
Internal Loops Non-Watson Crick paired stacked duplexes Several looped-out bases One Looped out base Base triple, no dinucleotide platform Unpaired, unstacked looped in bases Trans- glycosidic bond(s) Loops with unpaired stacked bases, no triples or dinucleotide platforms One looped-out base with stacked non-Watson Crick base pairs Loops with Dinucleotide platform

12 Limitations of the hierarchical classification (SCOR 1.1, 1.2)
Internal Loops Non-Watson Crick paired stacked duplexes Several looped-out bases One Looped out base Base triple, no dinucleotide platform Unpaired, unstacked looped in bases Trans- glycosidic bond(s) Loops with unpaired stacked bases, no triples or dinucleotide platforms One looped-out base with stacked non-Watson Crick base pairs Loops with Dinucleotide platform 1i6u: c:10-11, c:28 (A-U)A Tishchenko, et al., JMB 311:311 (2001) 1exy:a:9,20,22 (G,C,A) Jiang, et al. Structure 7:1461 (1999)

13 Organization of structural motifs: SCOR 2.0 and the DAG classification
Use a directed acyclic graph (DAG) to represent the relationships among motifs Increase searching options: by sequence, strand, PDB or NDB identifier, residue number and key words

14 Limitations of the hierarchical classification(SCOR 1.1, 1.2)
Internal Loops Non-Watson Crick paired stacked duplexes Several looped-out bases One Looped out base Base triple, no dinucleotide platform Unpaired, unstacked looped in bases Trans- glycosidic bond(s) Loops with unpaired stacked bases, no triples or dinucleotide platforms One looped-out base with stacked non-Watson Crick base pairs Loops with Dinucleotide platform 1i6u: c:10-11, c:28 (A-U)A Tishchenko, et al., JMB 311:311 (2001) 1exy:a:9,20,22 (G,C,A) Jiang, et al. Structure 7:1461 (1999)

15 SCOR 2.0 DAG: internal loop base triples
Internal Loops Loops with dinucleotide platforms Loops with base triples Loops with base triples, no dinucleotide platform Loops with simple dinucleotide platform Loops with a dinucleotide platform in a triple

16 Limitations of the DAG No clean way to present orthogonal attributes
“hairball” Multiple DAGs Not easily searchable Inherent awkwardness to browsing Inherent akwardness to browsing

17 Organization of structural motifs: hierarchically organized queryable attributes
PDB ID: 1dul Location: chain b, res ; chain b, res Sequence 146-UCAGG-150 165-GACGA-161 Base pairings ; U∙G; cis WC-WC ; C∙A; trans WC/Hoogsteen ; A∙C; trans WC/sugar edge ; G∙G; trans bifurcated/Hoogsteen ; G∙A; cis WC-WC Base stacking Adjacent: , , , … Non-adjacent: , (stack swap) Pseudotorsions Residue η θ χ 146.B 147.B 148.B RNA “Rotamers” Identify motifs that consist of these more atomic attributes. Organization of queryable attributes will, itself, be structured 1dul: b, b E. coli SRP/RNA Batey, et al., Science 287:1232 (2000)

18 Feature-based structural classification
*Sequence *Loop length Base pairings Pseudotorsion angles Hydrogen bonds Stacking adjacent and non-adjacent Classification of structural elements by features Feature-based searching and characterization of motifs

19 RNA Structural Elements
Characteristic Element Loop Motifs Tertiary Interaction Motifs Size Small, local May span entire loop Multiple loops, stems involved Sequence Conservation Little or none Often have sequence preferences/isosteric Interaction sites Structural Conservation By definition Often conserved Evolutionarily conserved Features (pairing, stacking, etc.) Usually single feature Multiple features/elements Multiple in each interacting motif Occurrence Found within various motifs Not nested; may occur in tertiary interaction motifs May include multiple elements and motifs

20

21 Element Name(s) Description Found In Reference
U turn/Uridine turn/Pi turn A sharp bend in the phosphate-sugar backbone between the first and second nucleotides, followed by characteristic stacking of the second and third nucleotides. Original descriptions include a stabilizing hydrogen bond between the first and third residues. Hairpin loops (e.g., GNRA, T--C loop) and internal loops (Holbrook et al., 1978; Kim and Sussman, 1976; Klosterman et al., 2004b; Quigley and Rich, 1976) A-minor interaction The insertion of minor groove edges of an adenine into the minor groove of neighboring helices. Four types have been identified. Ribose zipper, kink-turn (Nissen et al., 2001) S-turn Two consecutive bends in the phosphate-sugar backbone characterized by backbone distortions and inverted sugar puckers, resulting in an "S" shape. Loop E motif Sarcin-ricin loop (Correll et al., 1999; Szewczak et al., 1993; Wimberly et al., 1993) Dinucleotide platform Two adjacent, covalently linked, co-planar residues that form a non-Watson Crick pairing. Internal loops, often involved in a base triple (Klosterman et al., 2004b) Base triples Three hydrogen-bonded, coplanar bases with two of the bases sometimes forming a Watson-Crick pair or dinucleotide platform. Loop E motif, Sarcin-ricin loop Cross-strand stack A base on one strand stacks with a base on the opposing strand, rather than stacking with the adjacent bases on its own strand. Internal loops, e.g., Bacterial Loop E motif (Correll et al., 1997) Non-canonical base pairs Two bases of any type interacting in a generally planar arrangement can form hydrogen bonds in characteristic patterns. Double helices (Leontis and Westhof, 2001) (Nagaswamy et al., 2002) Extruded helical single strand Two or three unpaired bases extruded from the main double helical stack forming an independent stack. Internal and hairpin loops Backbone rotamers Commonly occurring RNA backbone conformations. Double helices, hairpin, internal and junction loops (Duarte et al., 2003; Hershkovitz et al., 2003; Murray et al., 2003; Schneider et al., 2004)

22 Annotation issues: What is a motif?
Recurrent structure Conserved structure Conserved function? I know it when I see it. Definition (glossary)

23 Annotation issues: Assessment
Canonical Variations (-like, pseudo-, reverse-, inverse-) eVal

24 Annotation issues: Who is it for?
Student. Naïve in knowledge of structural motifs, but expert in biology. Expert. Computer-readable, human-interpretable? But what about my favorite structure (sequence, motif)? BLAST?


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