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Discovering sequence and structure landscapes in RNA interaction motifs
Author(s) -
Marta Adinolfi,
Marco Pietrosanto,
Luca Parca,
Gabriele Ausiello,
Fabrizio Ferrè,
Manuela HelmerCitterich
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkz250
Subject(s) - biology , computational biology , rna , sequence motif , nucleic acid structure , nucleic acid secondary structure , structural motif , sequence (biology) , non coding rna , protein secondary structure , rna binding protein , sequence analysis , genetics , dna , gene , biochemistry
RNA molecules are able to bind proteins, DNA and other small or long RNAs using information at primary, secondary or tertiary structure level. Recent techniques that use cross-linking and immunoprecipitation of RNAs can detect these interactions and, if followed by high-throughput sequencing, molecules can be analysed to find recurrent elements shared by interactors, such as sequence and/or structure motifs. Many tools are able to find sequence motifs from lists of target RNAs, while others focus on structure using different approaches to find specific interaction elements. In this work, we make a systematic analysis of RBP-RNA and RNA-RNA datasets to better characterize the interaction landscape with information about multi-motifs on the same RNAs. To achieve this goal, we updated our BEAM algorithm to combine both sequence and structure information to create pairs of patterns that model motifs of interaction. This algorithm was applied to several RNA binding proteins and ncRNAs interactors, confirming already known motifs and discovering new ones. This landscape analysis on interaction variability reflects the diversity of target recognition and underlines that often both primary and secondary structure are involved in molecular recognition.

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