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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Rothia''-''sucC'' RNA motif}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Rothia''-''sucC'' RNA motif}}

Latest revision as of 21:45, 6 October 2024


Rothia-sucC
Consensus secondary structure and sequence conservation of Rothia-sucC RNA
Identifiers
SymbolRothia-sucC
RfamRF03024
Other data
RNA typeCis-reg
SOSO:0005836
PDB structuresPDBe

The Rothia-sucC RNA motif is a conserved RNA structure that was discovered by bioinformatics.[1] Rothia-sucC motif RNAs are found in the actinobacterial genus Rothia.

Rothia-sucC motif RNAs likely function as cis-regulatory elements, in view of their positions upstream of protein-coding genes. The presumably regulated genes encode Succinyl coenzyme A synthetase, which is a part of the citric acid cycle. These and related metabolically genes have previously been proposed to be regulated by the sucA RNA motif and the sucC RNA motif, but the conserved sequence and structure features of these motifs suggest they are not structurally related, although they might perform similar biological functions.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Weinberg Z, Lünse CE, Corbino KA, Ames TD, Nelson JW, Roth A, Perkins KR, Sherlock ME, Breaker RR (October 2017). "Detection of 224 candidate structured RNAs by comparative analysis of specific subsets of intergenic regions". Nucleic Acids Res. 45 (18): 10811–10823. doi:10.1093/nar/gkx699. PMC 5737381. PMID 28977401.