Evolutionary Analyses of Base-Pairing Interactions in DNA and RNA Secondary Structures

Author:

Golden Michael12,Murrell Benjamin3,Martin Darren4,Pybus Oliver G2,Hein Jotun1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

2. Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

3. Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

4. Department of Integrative Biomedical Sciences, Computational Biology Group, Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa

Abstract

AbstractPairs of nucleotides within functional nucleic acid secondary structures often display evidence of coevolution that is consistent with the maintenance of base-pairing. Here, we introduce a sequence evolution model, MESSI (Modeling the Evolution of Secondary Structure Interactions), that infers coevolution associated with base-paired sites in DNA or RNA sequence alignments. MESSI can estimate coevolution while accounting for an unknown secondary structure. MESSI can also use graphics processing unit parallelism to increase computational speed. We used MESSI to infer coevolution associated with GC, AU (AT in DNA), GU (GT in DNA) pairs in noncoding RNA alignments, and in single-stranded RNA and DNA virus alignments. Estimates of GU pair coevolution were found to be higher at base-paired sites in single-stranded RNA viruses and noncoding RNAs than estimates of GT pair coevolution in single-stranded DNA viruses. A potential biophysical explanation is that GT pairs do not stabilize DNA secondary structures to the same extent that GU pairs do in RNA. Additionally, MESSI estimates the degrees of coevolution at individual base-paired sites in an alignment. These estimates were computed for a SHAPE-MaP-determined HIV-1 NL4-3 RNA secondary structure. We found that estimates of coevolution were more strongly correlated with experimentally determined SHAPE-MaP pairing scores than three nonevolutionary measures of base-pairing covariation. To assist researchers in prioritizing substructures with potential functionality, MESSI automatically ranks substructures by degrees of coevolution at base-paired sites within them. Such a ranking was created for an HIV-1 subtype B alignment, revealing an excess of top-ranking substructures that have been previously identified as having structure-related functional importance, among several uncharacterized top-ranking substructures.

Funder

European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme

ERC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference53 articles.

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3. Founder effects in the assessment of HIV polymorphisms and HLA allele associations;Bhattacharya;Science,2007

4. Rfam 11.0: 10 years of RNA families;Burge;Nucleic Acids Res,2013

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