ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The ongoing effort to detect and characterize physical entanglement in biopolymers has so far established that knots are present in many globular proteins and also abound in viral DNA packaged inside bacteriophages. RNA molecules, on the other hand, have not yet been systematically screened for the occurrence of physical knots. We have accordingly undertaken the systematic profiling of the ~6,000 RNA structures present in the protein data bank. The search identified no more than three deeply-knotted RNA molecules. These are ribosomal RNAs solved by cryo-em and consist of about 3,000 nucleotides. Compared to the case of proteins and viral DNA, the observed incidence of RNA knots is therefore practically negligible. This suggests that either evolutionary selection, or thermodynamic and kinetic folding mechanisms act towards minimizing the entanglement of RNA to an extent that is unparalleled by other types of biomolecules. The properties of the three observed RNA knotting patterns provide valuable clues for designing RNA sequences capable of self-tying in a twist-knot fold.
We present a novel topological classification of RNA secondary structures with pseudoknots. It is based on the topological genus of the circular diagram associated to the RNA base-pair structure. The genus is a positive integer number, whose value qu
We enumerate the number of RNA contact structures according to their genus, i.e. the topological character of their pseudoknots. By using a recently proposed matrix model formulation for the RNA folding problem, we obtain exact results for the simple
RNA/protein interactions play crucial roles in controlling gene expression. They are becoming important targets for pharmaceutical applications. Due to RNA flexibility and to the strength of electrostatic interactions, standard docking methods are in
We perform theoretical studies of stretching of 20 proteins with knots within a coarse grained model. The knots ends are found to jump to well defined sequential locations that are associated with sharp turns whereas in homopolymers they diffuse arou
We present a simplified model of the dynamics of translocation of RNA through a nanopore which only allows the passage of unbound nucleotides. In particular, we consider the disorder averaged translocation dynamics of random, two-component, single-st