Pseudoknot



A pseudoknot is a nucleic acid secondary structure containing at least two stem-loop structures in which half of one stem is intercalated between the two halves of another stem. The pseudoknot was first recognized in the turnip yellow mosaic virus in 1982. Pseudoknots fold into knot-shaped three-dimensional conformations but are not true topological knots.

Prediction and identification
The structural configuration of pseudoknots does not lend itself well to bio-computational detection due to its context-sensitivity or “overlapping” nature. The base pairing in pseudoknots is not well nested; that is, base pairs occur that "overlap" one another in sequence position. This makes the presence of pseudoknots in RNA sequences more difficult to predict by the standard method of dynamic programming, which use a recursive scoring system to identify paired stems and consequently, most cannot detect non-nested base pairs. The newer method of stochastic context-free grammars suffers from the same problem. Thus, popular secondary structure prediction methods like Mfold and Pfold will not predict pseudoknot structures present in a query sequence; they will only identify the more stable of the two pseudoknot stems.

It is possible to identify a limited class of pseudoknots using dynamic programming, but these methods are not exhaustive and scale worse as a function of sequence length than unpseudoknotted algorithms. The general problem of predicting lowest free energy structures with pseudoknots has been shown to be NP-complete.

Biological significance
Several important biological processes rely on RNA molecules that form pseudoknots. For example, the Telomerase RNA component contains a pseudoknot that is critical for activity. Several viruses use a pseudoknot structure to form a tRNA-like motif to infiltrate the host cell. The pseudoknot region of RNase P is one of the most conserved elements in all of evolution.

RNA molecules with extensive tertiary structure often have substantial pseudoknots.