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Dive into the research topics where Maciej Antczak is active.

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Featured researches published by Maciej Antczak.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Automated 3D structure composition for large RNAs

Mariusz Popenda; Marta Szachniuk; Maciej Antczak; Katarzyna J. Purzycka; Piotr Lukasiak; Natalia Bartol; Jacek Blazewicz; Ryszard W. Adamiak

Understanding the numerous functions that RNAs play in living cells depends critically on knowledge of their three-dimensional structure. Due to the difficulties in experimentally assessing structures of large RNAs, there is currently great demand for new high-resolution structure prediction methods. We present the novel method for the fully automated prediction of RNA 3D structures from a user-defined secondary structure. The concept is founded on the machine translation system. The translation engine operates on the RNA FRABASE database tailored to the dictionary relating the RNA secondary structure and tertiary structure elements. The translation algorithm is very fast. Initial 3D structure is composed in a range of seconds on a single processor. The method assures the prediction of large RNA 3D structures of high quality. Our approach needs neither structural templates nor RNA sequence alignment, required for comparative methods. This enables the building of unresolved yet native and artificial RNA structures. The method is implemented in a publicly available, user-friendly server RNAComposer. It works in an interactive mode and a batch mode. The batch mode is designed for large-scale modelling and accepts atomic distance restraints. Presently, the server is set to build RNA structures of up to 500 residues.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

RNApdbee—a webserver to derive secondary structures from pdb files of knotted and unknotted RNAs

Maciej Antczak; Tomasz Zok; Mariusz Popenda; Piotr Lukasiak; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Jacek Blazewicz; Marta Szachniuk

In RNA structural biology and bioinformatics an access to correct RNA secondary structure and its proper representation is of crucial importance. This is true especially in the field of secondary and 3D RNA structure prediction. Here, we introduce RNApdbee-a new tool that allows to extract RNA secondary structure from the pdb file, and presents it in both textual and graphical form. RNApdbee supports processing of knotted and unknotted structures of large RNAs, also within protein complexes. The method works not only for first but also for high order pseudoknots, and gives an information about canonical and non-canonical base pairs. A combination of these features is unique among existing applications for RNA structure analysis. Additionally, a function of converting between the text notations, i.e. BPSEQ, CT and extended dot-bracket, is provided. In order to facilitate a more comprehensive study, the webserver integrates the functionality of RNAView, MC-Annotate and 3DNA/DSSR, being the most common tools used for automated identification and classification of RNA base pairs. RNApdbee is implemented as a publicly available webserver with an intuitive interface and can be freely accessed at http://rnapdbee.cs.put.poznan.pl/.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

RNAlyzer—novel approach for quality analysis of RNA structural models

Piotr Lukasiak; Maciej Antczak; Tomasz Ratajczak; Janusz M. Bujnicki; Marta Szachniuk; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Mariusz Popenda; Jacek Blazewicz

The continuously increasing amount of RNA sequence and experimentally determined 3D structure data drives the development of computational methods supporting exploration of these data. Contemporary functional analysis of RNA molecules, such as ribozymes or riboswitches, covers various issues, among which tertiary structure modeling becomes more and more important. A growing number of tools to model and predict RNA structure calls for an evaluation of these tools and the quality of outcomes their produce. Thus, the development of reliable methods designed to meet this need is relevant in the context of RNA tertiary structure analysis and can highly influence the quality and usefulness of RNA tertiary structure prediction in the nearest future. Here, we present RNAlyzer—a computational method for comparison of RNA 3D models with the reference structure and for discrimination between the correct and incorrect models. Our approach is based on the idea of local neighborhood, defined as a set of atoms included in the sphere centered around a user-defined atom. A unique feature of the RNAlyzer is the simultaneous visualization of the model-reference structure distance at different levels of detail, from the individual residues to the entire molecules.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2015

New in silico approach to assessing RNA secondary structures with non-canonical base pairs

Agnieszka Rybarczyk; Natalia Szostak; Maciej Antczak; Tomasz Zok; Mariusz Popenda; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Jacek Blazewicz; Marta Szachniuk

BackgroundThe function of RNA is strongly dependent on its structure, so an appropriate recognition of this structure, on every level of organization, is of great importance. One particular concern is the assessment of base-base interactions, described as the secondary structure, the knowledge of which greatly facilitates an interpretation of RNA function and allows for structure analysis on the tertiary level. The RNA secondary structure can be predicted from a sequence using in silico methods often adjusted with experimental data, or assessed from 3D structure atom coordinates. Computational approaches typically consider only canonical, Watson-Crick and wobble base pairs. Handling of non-canonical interactions, important for a full description of RNA structure, is still very difficult.ResultsWe introduce our novel approach to assessing an extended RNA secondary structure, which characterizes both canonical and non-canonical base pairs, along with their type classification. It is based on predicting the RNA 3D structure from a user-provided sequence or a secondary structure that only describes canonical base pairs, and then deriving the extended secondary structure from atom coordinates. In our example implementation, this was achieved by integrating the functionality of two fully automated, high fidelity methods in a computational pipeline: RNAComposer for the 3D RNA structure prediction and RNApdbee for base-pair annotation.ConclusionsThe presented methodology ties together existing applications for RNA 3D structure prediction and base-pair annotation. The example performance, applying RNAComposer and RNApdbee, reveals better accuracy in non-canonical base pair assessment than the compared methods that directly predict RNA secondary structure.


Acta Biochimica Polonica | 2016

New functionality of RNAComposer: an application to shape the axis of miR160 precursor structure

Maciej Antczak; Mariusz Popenda; Tomasz Zok; Joanna Sarzynska; Tomasz Ratajczak; Katarzyna Tomczyk; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Marta Szachniuk

RNAComposer is a fully automated, web-interfaced system for RNA 3D structure prediction, freely available at http://rnacomposer.cs.put.poznan.pl/ and http://rnacomposer.ibch.poznan.pl/. Its main components are: manually curated database of RNA 3D structure elements, highly efficient computational engine and user-friendly web application. In this paper, we demonstrate how the latest additions to the system allow the user to significantly affect the process of 3D model composition on several computational levels. Although in general our method is based on the knowledge of secondary structure topology, currently the RNAComposer offers a choice of six incorporated programs for secondary structure prediction. It also allows to apply a conditional search in the database of 3D structure elements and introduce user-provided elements into the final 3D model. This new functionality contributes to a significant improvement of the predicted 3D model reliability and it facilitates a better model adjustment to the experimental data. This is exemplified based on the RNAComposer application for modelling of the 3D structures of precursors of the miR160 family members.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

RNAssess—a web server for quality assessment of RNA 3D structures

Piotr Lukasiak; Maciej Antczak; Tomasz Ratajczak; Marta Szachniuk; Mariusz Popenda; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Jacek Blazewicz

Nowadays, various methodologies can be applied to model RNA 3D structure. Thus, the plausible quality assessment of 3D models has a fundamental impact on the progress of structural bioinformatics. Here, we present RNAssess server, a novel tool dedicated to visual evaluation of RNA 3D models in the context of the known reference structure for a wide range of accuracy levels (from atomic to the whole molecule perspective). The proposed server is based on the concept of local neighborhood, defined as a set of atoms observed within a sphere localized around a central atom of a particular residue. A distinctive feature of our server is the ability to perform simultaneous visual analysis of the model-reference structure coherence. RNAssess supports the quality assessment through delivering both static and interactive visualizations that allows an easy identification of native-like models and/or chosen structural regions of the analyzed molecule. A combination of results provided by RNAssess allows us to rank analyzed models. RNAssess offers new route to a fast and efficient 3D model evaluation suitable for the RNA-Puzzles challenge. The proposed automated tool is implemented as a free and open to all users web server with an user-friendly interface and can be accessed at: http://rnassess.cs.put.poznan.pl/


Bioinformatics | 2018

New algorithms to represent complex pseudoknotted RNA structures in dot-bracket notation

Maciej Antczak; Mariusz Popenda; Tomasz Zok; Michal Zurkowski; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Marta Szachniuk

Motivation Understanding the formation, architecture and roles of pseudoknots in RNA structures are one of the most difficult challenges in RNA computational biology and structural bioinformatics. Methods predicting pseudoknots typically perform this with poor accuracy, often despite experimental data incorporation. Existing bioinformatic approaches differ in terms of pseudoknots’ recognition and revealing their nature. A few ways of pseudoknot classification exist, most common ones refer to a genus or order. Following the latter one, we propose new algorithms that identify pseudoknots in RNA structure provided in BPSEQ format, determine their order and encode in dot‐bracket‐letter notation. The proposed encoding aims to illustrate the hierarchy of RNA folding. Results New algorithms are based on dynamic programming and hybrid (combining exhaustive search and random walk) approaches. They evolved from elementary algorithm implemented within the workflow of RNA FRABASE 1.0, our database of RNA structure fragments. They use different scoring functions to rank dissimilar dot‐bracket representations of RNA structure. Computational experiments show an advantage of new methods over the others, especially for large RNA structures. Availability and implementation Presented algorithms have been implemented as new functionality of RNApdbee webserver and are ready to use at http://rnapdbee.cs.put.poznan.pl. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


International Journal of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science | 2015

Building the Library of Rna 3D Nucleotide Conformations Using the Clustering Approach

Tomasz Zok; Maciej Antczak; Martin Riedel; David Nebel; Thomas Villmann; Piotr Lukasiak; Jacek Blazewicz; Marta Szachniuk

Abstract An increasing number of known RNA 3D structures contributes to the recognition of various RNA families and identification of their features. These tasks are based on an analysis of RNA conformations conducted at different levels of detail. On the other hand, the knowledge of native nucleotide conformations is crucial for structure prediction and understanding of RNA folding. However, this knowledge is stored in structural databases in a rather distributed form. Therefore, only automated methods for sampling the space of RNA structures can reveal plausible conformational representatives useful for further analysis. Here, we present a machine learning-based approach to inspect the dataset of RNA three-dimensional structures and to create a library of nucleotide conformers. A median neural gas algorithm is applied to cluster nucleotide structures upon their trigonometric description. The clustering procedure is two-stage: (i) backbone- and (ii) ribose-driven. We show the resulting library that contains RNA nucleotide representatives over the entire data, and we evaluate its quality by computing normal distribution measures and average RMSD between data points as well as the prototype within each cluster.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

RNApdbee 2.0: multifunctional tool for RNA structure annotation

Tomasz Zok; Maciej Antczak; Michal Zurkowski; Mariusz Popenda; Jacek Blazewicz; Ryszard W. Adamiak; Marta Szachniuk

Abstract In the field of RNA structural biology and bioinformatics, an access to correctly annotated RNA structure is of crucial importance, especially in the secondary and 3D structure predictions. RNApdbee webserver, introduced in 2014, primarily aimed to address the problem of RNA secondary structure extraction from the PDB files. Its new version, RNApdbee 2.0, is a highly advanced multifunctional tool for RNA structure annotation, revealing the relationship between RNA secondary and 3D structure given in the PDB or PDBx/mmCIF format. The upgraded version incorporates new algorithms for recognition and classification of high-ordered pseudoknots in large RNA structures. It allows analysis of isolated base pairs impact on RNA structure. It can visualize RNA secondary structures—including that of quadruplexes—with depiction of non-canonical interactions. It also annotates motifs to ease identification of stems, loops and single-stranded fragments in the input RNA structure. RNApdbee 2.0 is implemented as a publicly available webserver with an intuitive interface and can be freely accessed at http://rnapdbee.cs.put.poznan.pl/


Rairo-operations Research | 2016

High-order statistical compressor for long-term storage of DNA sequencing data

Marek Chłopkowski; Maciej Antczak; Michal Slusarczyk; Aleksander Wdowinski; Michal Zajaczkowski; Marta Kasprzak

We present a specialized compressor designed for efficient data storage of FASTQ files produced by high-throughput DNA sequencers. Since the method has been optimized for compression quality, it is especially suitable for long-term storage and for genome research centers processing huge amount of data (counted in petabytes). The proposed compressor uses high-order statistical models for range encoding, similar to Markov models, but the whole input is considered in building a symbol context. Compression of DNA reads is performed according to LZ-style with the use of the 5–7th order model, while nucleotides’ scores are encoded with the 3rd order model.

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Marta Szachniuk

Poznań University of Technology

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Jacek Blazewicz

Poznań University of Technology

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Mariusz Popenda

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Piotr Lukasiak

Poznań University of Technology

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Tomasz Zok

Poznań University of Technology

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Artur Laskowski

Poznań University of Technology

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Jan Badura

Poznań University of Technology

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Agnieszka Rybarczyk

Poznań University of Technology

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