Publication | Open Access
Computer analysis of nucleic acid regulatory sequences.
181
Citations
17
References
1977
Year
Nucleic Acid SequencesComputer AnalysisGeneticsMolecular BiologyGenomicsSequence AlignmentGene RecognitionSequence MotifTranscriptional RegulationDna SequencingSequence AnalysisDna ReplicationFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsDyad SymmetriesNatural SciencesNucleic Acid BiochemistryComputational BiologyStrong Dyad SymmetriesSystems BiologyMedicineGenome Editing
We describe a computer program designed to facilitate the analysis of nucleic acid sequences. The program can search several nucleic acid sequences for oligonucleotides common to all of them. It can examine a DNA or RNA sequence for two kinds of homologous regions--repetitions and dyad symmetries. The homologies need not be perfect: mismatches and "looping out" of nucleotides are allowed. The program also finds (A+T)- and (G+C)-rich regions, locates restriction enzyme recognition sites, determines the distribution of di- and trinucleotides, and performs various other functions. We include two representative applications of the program. All published prokaryotic transcription termination sequences (June 1977) were found to share the following features: (i) a string of at least five T residues, (ii) the sequence CGGGC or a close analog immediately preceding the T cluster, (iii) a region of strong dyad symmetry preceding the Ts and including the CGGGC sequence. A sequence of 221 nucleotides consisting of the Escherichia coli trp promoter, operator, and leader was found to contain two strong dyad symmetries. These homologies both occur at known regulatory sites; no comparable homologies occur in regions without regulatory significance.
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