Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Netiquette · Download · News · Gallery · Homepage · DSSR Manual · G-quadruplexes · DSSR-Jmol · DSSR-PyMOL · DSSR Licensing · Video Overview· RNA Covers

Messages - GuidoLeoni

Pages: [1]
1
Thank for your tips.
Your solution is the most practical to solve my challenge considering that i don't need of precise and minimized structure as initial input for my docking calculations.
Best regards

2
The empty spaces in alignment are mismatches


U A A A G U G C U U A U
 |  |   |  |  |   |   |   |         |  |
A U U UC  A C  G C C U A

3
Of course  :D
I ought to perform some docking studies on a experimentally validated (luciferase assay) pair mirna-target.
According to the assay, I can't determine the portion of the target that is bound by the mirna. Therefore I ran a mirna binding-site predictor on the mrna sequence of the target highlighting some interesting candidate positions. 
In order to further characterize my binding i thought to perform some dockings between the complex formed by mirna with the portion of target highlighted by predictors  and the Argonaute protein.
The central point is that i need to rebuild the pair mirna- target as highlighted by my predictors in order to use it as input for docking.
Here is an example  with part of the 2 sequences. The first sequence is the mirna and the second is the target


U A A A G U G C U U A U
 |  |   |  |  |   |   |   |         |  |
A U U UC  A C  G       U A

I hope that my explanation is enough clear and sorry for the "naif" representation of the mirna-target pairment
Thank you very much
Guido Leoni

4
RNA structures (DSSR) / Can 3DNA be used to build a miRNA-target structure?
« on: November 21, 2012, 03:10:21 am »
Thank for your work with 3DNA.
Might it be possible to reproduce with 3DNA a structure of a mirna target pairment?
Best regards

Pages: [1]

Created and maintained by Dr. Xiang-Jun Lu [律祥俊] (xiangjun@x3dna.org)
The Bussemaker Laboratory at the Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University.