Gut-1 RNA motif

The Gut-1 RNA motif (also called gt-1) is a conserved RNA structure identified by bioinformatics.[1][2] These RNAs are present in environmental sequences, and as of 2010 are not known to be present in any species that has been grown under laboratory conditions. Gut-1 RNA is exclusively found in DNA from uncultivated bacteria present in samples from the human gut.

Gut-1 RNA
Consensus secondary structure of Gut-1 RNAs
Identifiers
SymbolGut-1
Alt. Symbolsgt-1
RfamRF01706
Other data
RNA typesRNA
Domain(s)Metagenomic camples
PDB structuresPDBe

References

  1. Weinberg Z, Wang JX, Bogue J, et al. (March 2010). "Comparative genomics reveals 104 candidate structured RNAs from bacteria, archaea and their metagenomes". Genome Biol. 11 (3): R31. doi:10.1186/gb-2010-11-3-r31. PMC 2864571. PMID 20230605.
  2. Weinberg Z, Perreault J, Meyer MM, Breaker RR (December 2009). "Exceptional structured noncoding RNAs revealed by bacterial metagenome analysis". Nature. 462 (7273): 656–659. doi:10.1038/nature08586. PMC 4140389. PMID 19956260.
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