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Single Molecule Conformational Memory Extraction: P5ab RNA Hairpin
Author(s) -
Steve Pressé,
Jack Peterson,
Julian Lee,
Phillip Elms,
Justin L. MacCallum,
Susan Marqusee,
Carlos Bustamante,
Ken A. Dill
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/jp500611f
Subject(s) - markov chain , molecule , folding (dsp implementation) , statistical physics , set (abstract data type) , chemistry , markov model , biological system , force spectroscopy , rna , computer science , physics , algorithm , computational chemistry , quantum mechanics , biology , biochemistry , machine learning , gene , electrical engineering , programming language , engineering
Extracting kinetic models from single molecule data is an important route to mechanistic insight in biophysics, chemistry, and biology. Data collected from force spectroscopy can probe discrete hops of a single molecule between different conformational states. Model extraction from such data is a challenging inverse problem because single molecule data are noisy and rich in structure. Standard modeling methods normally assume (i) a prespecified number of discrete states and (ii) that transitions between states are Markovian. The data set is then fit to this predetermined model to find a handful of rates describing the transitions between states. We show that it is unnecessary to assume either (i) or (ii) and focus our analysis on the zipping/unzipping transitions of an RNA hairpin. The key is in starting with a very broad class of non-Markov models in order to let the data guide us toward the best model from this very broad class. Our method suggests that there exists a folding intermediate for the P5ab RNA hairpin whose zipping/unzipping is monitored by force spectroscopy experiments. This intermediate would not have been resolved if a Markov model had been assumed from the onset. We compare the merits of our method with those of others.

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