Characterization of H-type pseudoknots with DSSR

The v1.2.1 (2015feb01) release of DSSR contains a new functionality to characterize the so-called H-type pseudoknots. In this classical and most common type of pseudoknots, nucleotides from a hairpin loop form Watson-Crick base pairs with a single-stranded region outside of the hairpin to create another (adjacent) stem, as shown in the following illustration (taken from the Huang et al. paper A heuristic approach for detecting RNA H-type pseudoknots).

Schematic diagram the H-type pseudoknot

Normally, L2 is absent (i.e., with zero nucleotides) due to direct coaxial stacking of the two stems. An example output of DSSR on 1ymo (a human telomerase RNA pseudoknot) is shown below:

3D and secondary structures of an H-type pseudoknot (1ymo)

The corresponding sections from DSSR output are:

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List of 3 H-type pseudoknot loop segments
   1 stem#1(hairpin#1) vs stem#2(hairpin#2) L1 groove=MAJOR nts=8 UUUUUCUC U7,U8,U9,U10,U11,C12,U13,C14
   2 stem#1(hairpin#1) vs stem#2(hairpin#2) L2 groove=----- nts=0
   3 stem#1(hairpin#1) vs stem#2(hairpin#2) L3 groove=minor nts=8 CAAACAAA C30,A31,A32,A33,C34,A35,A36,A37

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Secondary structures in dot-bracket notation (dbn) as a whole and per chain
>1ymo-1-A #1 nts=47 [chain] RNA
GGGCUGUUUUUCUCGCUGACUUUCAGCCCCAAACAAAAAAGUCAGCA
[[[[[[........(((((((((]]]]]]........))))))))).

Checking against the three-dimensional image and the secondary structure in linear form shown above, the meaning of the new section should be obvious. If you want to see more details, click the link to the DSSR-output file on 1ymo.

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