Bioinformatics | 2021

dsRBPBind: Modeling the effect of RNA secondary structure on double stranded RNA-protein binding.

 
 

Abstract


MOTIVATION\nRNA-binding proteins are fundamental to many cellular processes. Double stranded RNA binding proteins (dsRBPs) in particular are crucial for RNA interference, mRNA elongation, A-to-I editing, host defense, splicing, and a multitude of other important mechanisms. Since dsRBPs require double-stranded RNA to bind, their binding affinity depends on the competition among all possible secondary structures of the target RNA molecule. Here, we introduce a quantitative model that allows calculation of the effective affinity of dsRBPs to any RNA given a principal affinity and the sequence of the RNA, while fully taking into account the entire secondary structure ensemble of the RNA.\n\n\nRESULTS\nWe implement our model within the ViennaRNA folding package while maintaining its O(N3) time complexity. We validate our quantitative model by comparing with experimentally determined binding affinities and stoichiometries for transactivation response element RNA-binding protein (TRBP). We also find that the change in dsRBP binding affinity purely due to the presence of alternative RNA structures can be many orders of magnitude and that the predicted affinity of TRBP for pre-miRNA-like constructs correlates with experimentally measured processing rates.\n\n\nAVAILABILITY\nOur modified version of the ViennaRNA package is available for download at http://bioserv.mps.ohio-state.edu/dsRBPBind, is free to use for research and educational purposes, and utilizes simple get/set methods for footprint size, concentration, cooperativity, principal dissociation constant, and overlap.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/bioinformatics/btab724
Language English
Journal Bioinformatics

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