Correlation between nucleotide composition and folding energy of coding sequences with special attention to wobble bases
Jan C. Biro

TL;DR
This study investigates how nucleotide composition, especially wobble bases, influences mRNA folding energy, revealing that synonymous codons have distinct impacts on structure and are correlated with amino acid composition.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the folding energy of coding sequences can be predicted from sequence composition and that synonymous codons differ significantly in their structural contributions.
Findings
Wobble bases can alter folding energy by approximately fourfold.
The sequence/FE relationship is predictable with a simple algorithm.
Synonymous codons have additive and non-interchangeable effects on folding energy.
Abstract
Background: The secondary structure and complexity of mRNA influences its accessibility to regulatory molecules (proteins, micro-RNAs), its stability and its level of expression. The mobile elements of the RNA sequence, the wobble bases, are expected to regulate the formation of structures encompassing coding sequences. Results: The sequence/folding energy (FE) relationship was studied by statistical, bioinformatic methods in 90 CDS containing 26,370 codons. I found that the FE (dG) associated with coding sequences is significant and negative (407 kcal/1000 bases, mean +/- S.E.M.) indicating that these sequences are able to form structures. However, the FE has only a small free component, less than 10% of the total. The contribution of the 1st and 3rd codon bases to the FE is larger than the contribution of the 2nd (central) bases. It is possible to achieve a ~ 4-fold change in FE by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms · RNA Research and Splicing · RNA modifications and cancer
