PLoS ONE (Jan 2007)

Stability of mRNA/DNA and DNA/DNA duplexes affects mRNA transcription.

  • Rayna I Kraeva,
  • Dragomir B Krastev,
  • Assen Roguev,
  • Anna Ivanova,
  • Marina N Nedelcheva-Veleva,
  • Stoyno S Stoynov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000290
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
p. e290

Abstract

Read online

Nucleic acids, due to their structural and chemical properties, can form double-stranded secondary structures that assist the transfer of genetic information and can modulate gene expression. However, the nucleotide sequence alone is insufficient in explaining phenomena like intron-exon recognition during RNA processing. This raises the question whether nucleic acids are endowed with other attributes that can contribute to their biological functions. In this work, we present a calculation of thermodynamic stability of DNA/DNA and mRNA/DNA duplexes across the genomes of four species in the genus Saccharomyces by nearest-neighbor method. The results show that coding regions are more thermodynamically stable than introns, 3'-untranslated regions and intergenic sequences. Furthermore, open reading frames have more stable sense mRNA/DNA duplexes than the potential antisense duplexes, a property that can aid gene discovery. The lower stability of the DNA/DNA and mRNA/DNA duplexes of 3'-untranslated regions and the higher stability of genes correlates with increased mRNA level. These results suggest that the thermodynamic stability of DNA/DNA and mRNA/DNA duplexes affects mRNA transcription.