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

Author Topic: Further note on DSSR  (Read 23890 times)

Offline xiangjun

  • Administrator
  • with-posts
  • *****
  • Posts: 1650
    • View Profile
    • 3DNA homepage
Further note on DSSR
« on: April 25, 2013, 01:13:56 pm »
Mainly prompted by questions from Pascal (who has contributed the most posts among 3DNA users), here is a further note on DSSR.

Quote
It [DSSR] looks like a combined version of find_pair and analyze. Is that correct ?
Of course it seems not possible to (re)construct NA structures with DSSR.
Yes, to certain extent, you can think DSSR as a combination of find_pair and analyze. The post "DSSR, what's it and why bother?" provides more background information. You are right, DSSR does not construct nucleic acid structures.

DSSR represents my (opinionated) view of what a program for the structural analysis of nucleic acids (RNA in particular) should/could be, based on my extensive experience in supporting 3DNA, an increased knowledge in RNA structures and refined skills in C programming.

Quote
So first, why calling it DSSR and not DSSNA since it works also for DNA ?
I think that one should avoid the RNA domination, it is possible to learn from both structures.
thus, does DSSR really work for DNA ?
Again, read carefully the post "DSSR, what's it and why bother?" for my rationale. You may also notice that I put the word secondary in parenthesis in the title of the software, "DSSR: Software for Defining the (Secondary) Structures of RNA". DSSR surely works for DNA, or DNA-protein complexes in the same way as it does for RNA. As mentioned in the release note, I tested DSSR against every nucleic-acid-containing structure in the PDB. Overall, the acronym DSSR captures the essential message I'd like to get across, it is short, and it parallels the well-respected DSSP program for proteins (among other things).

Quote
Then, as for formats,
I think that as I mentioned it somewhere earlier, and since I am processing the output files
for a large number of structures, I appreciate when there are spacesbetween fields (see).
Code: [Select]
      base_id            alpha    beta   gamma   delta  epsilon   zeta     e-z        chi            phase-angle   sugar-type     Zp      Dp
 1     A.C2649            ---    167.1    47.6    84.1  -146.6   -77.1    -69(BI)   -160.5(anti)    12.9(C3'-endo)  ~C3'-endo    4.41    4.66
 2     A.U2650           -64.2   164.2    60.3    79.8  -154.5   -73.1    -81(BI)   -167.2(anti)    21.3(C3'-endo)  ~C3'-endo    4.40    4.55
I see your point, but the purpose of the output file is mainly for visual examination by a non-expert user. The message appears to be succinct. Your parser should be flexible enough to handle the case. Also see my reply to your initial thread.

Quote
and is there a need for writing twice the sugar pucker in this file ?
From my experience, the phase angle and pucker classification are the most useful information for the sugar moiety. I repeated  the sugar pucker together with commonly used backbone parameters for convenience; one can now easily see the backbone conformation at a glance.

Quote
you name this file torsion although there are sugar puckers in it.
Thus it might be called torsion_puckers.dat or something else.
I see your point, but the file also contains Zp and Dp, and pseudo torsion angles. I'd keep the name as is; it is just a convention to get used to.

Quote
For the non-pairing interactions that is just a great feature,

you had before two values for base overlap
one calculated by just using ring atoms the other by using all base atoms.

you could add this.
DSSR checks base-stacking interaction using all base atoms, and so is the output value of base-overlap-area. I will consider to add overlap areas based on just ring atoms.

Quote
Why adding the name of the chemical groups (hydroxyl, amino, imino, ...)
again this complicates reading since some groups are named and others not like OP2 and so on.

I would appreciate another presentation here.
I added the names of chemical groups (hydroxyl/amino/imino) for the convenience of those who are not that familiar with the chemistry of H-bond. I've first-hand experience with such people (mostly physics/mathematics/computer science turned bioinformaticians). I can add an option to turn the chemical group off; but honestly, I really think you should revised your parser to handle it properly.

Take the following case as an example:
Code: [Select]
H-bonds[2]: "N3(imino)-N1[2.81]; O4(carbonyl)-N6(amino)[3.13]"if your parser can extract the distance and the PDB atom names, it won't be that far to check for () and get rid of the name of the chemical groups.

Quote
I haven't really checked, but are your base pair numbering scheme coherent with the one
you use in find_pair ? It would be really nice to be the case.
What do you mean by "base pair numbering scheme"? The serial numbers should not matter; the base pair is specified by the two constituent nucleotides (chain id, residue name and number, etc).

Quote
Also, I wanted to ask you that but know it seems to be done. You add various names
to each base pair. Thats great. Just a hint to the various nomenclatures (Leontis-Westhof, Saenger...)
would be helpful in the *.out files.
Advice taken  :) -- I will add a note in DSSR-beta-r10 (coming soon).

Quote
is there a configuration file that would allow to precise hydrogen bond and other parameters like in 3DNA.
I would really appreciate that.
To make DSSR self-contained, I've eliminated the configuration file. Overall, DSSR has refined algorithms for finding H-bonds, base pairs, helices etc, and the defaults should work for the vast majority of cases. So regular users could take DSSR as a black box, and they can check the results based on their domain knowledge and application needs.

DSSR also accepts command-line options to alter the default behavior. For example, you can use --hbond_d2=3.6 to set up the upper limit of H-bond length to 3.6 instead of the default 4.0 Å. I am working on a manuscript that describes details of the software.

HTH,

Xiang-Jun
« Last Edit: April 25, 2013, 07:55:36 pm by xiangjun »

 

Funded by the NIH R24GM153869 grant on X3DNA-DSSR, an NIGMS National Resource for Structural Bioinformatics of Nucleic Acids

Created and maintained by Dr. Xiang-Jun Lu, Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University