Biology:Poribacteria-1 RNA motif
Poribacteria-1 | |
---|---|
Consensus secondary structure and sequence conservation of Poribacteria-1 RNA | |
Identifiers | |
Symbol | Poribacteria-1 |
Rfam | RF03113 |
Other data | |
RNA type | Gene; sRNA |
SO | 0001263 |
PDB structures | PDBe |
The Poribacteria-1 RNA motif is a conserved RNA structure that was discovered by bioinformatics.[1] The Poribacteria-1 motif is found only in the candidate bacterial phylum known as Poribacteria, and all 6 Poribacteria-1 RNAs are actually found in one organism, Candidatus Poribacteria sp. WGA-4E. All but one of these RNAs occur within roughly 6 kilobases of genomic DNA, and each of the 5 RNAs occurs between a different pair of protein-coding genes. This arrangement could suggest that the motif functions on the level of single-stranded DNA as attC sites that are part of an integron. It is also possible that Poribacteria-1 RNAs are cis-regulatory elements that regulate genes that happen to often be nearby to one another, or that the RNAs function in trans as small RNAs.
References
- ↑ "Detection of 224 candidate structured RNAs by comparative analysis of specific subsets of intergenic regions". Nucleic Acids Res. 45 (18): 10811–10823. October 2017. doi:10.1093/nar/gkx699. PMID 28977401.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poribacteria-1 RNA motif.
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