Hello,
I have a question regarding base-pair parameter calculations with DSSR. I was analyzing some RNA structures and looking at a specific base-pair type, the G+A : tm+m pair (and A+G :tm+m). These pairings usually fall withing higher pairing patterns (ie triplet pairs). I was expecting that I would be able to 'flip' the A+G over to look like the G+A, ie taking - shear and buckle, and this is correct. What I was not expecting was negative values of stretch and opening in G+A vs positive in the A+G.
Here is an example output
Pair 1 is A+G in 3SDS
7 1:A.A8 1:A.G44 A+G 00-n/a tSS tm+m
7 1 8 44 ....>A:...8_:[..A]A-**+-G[..G]:..44_:A<....
A+G 3.21 8.15 -0.00 -19.59 0.27 175.33
A+G [1] N3 - N2 3.15
parallel trans trans
Pair 2 is G+A in 4ENB
3 1:A.G3 1:A.A21 G+A 00-n/a tSS tm+m
3 2 3 21 ....>A:...3_:[..G]G-**+-A[..A]:..21_:A<....
G+A -2.55 -7.43 0.59 -25.28 0.52 -148.92
G+A [2] O2'- N1 2.61 N2 - N3 3.12
parallel trans trans
Both of the pairs overlap well in 3D space. I was also to see the orientation of both pairs the same in the dssr-pairs.pdb file, I thought the G+A and G+A would be rotated 180deg with respect to each other but both were in the same orientation.
Can you tell me the meaning of the negative parameters? Should I expect these in other pairings? I am used to DNA analysis with 3DNA-analyze and in that case an A-T pair and a T-A pair are the same except for movement along the x-axis.
Thanks,
Andrew