Publications by authors named "D Incarnato"

Article Synopsis
  • - Conformational dynamics of RNA is essential for its biological roles and therapeutic applications.
  • - The CECAM workshop in Paris focused on how both experimental and computational methods can explore RNA dynamics.
  • - Key insights and takeaways were shared during the workshop, highlighting the importance of understanding RNA behavior for advanced research and development.
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RNA's ability to form and interconvert between multiple secondary and tertiary structures is critical to its functional versatility and the traditional view of RNA structures as static entities has shifted towards understanding them as dynamic conformational ensembles. In this review we discuss RNA structural ensembles and their dynamics, highlighting the concept of conformational energy landscapes as a unifying framework for understanding RNA processes such as folding, misfolding, conformational changes, and complex formation. Ongoing advancements in cryo-electron microscopy and chemical probing techniques are significantly enhancing our ability to investigate multiple structures adopted by conformationally dynamic RNAs, while traditional methods such as nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy continue to play a crucial role in providing high-resolution, quantitative spatial and temporal information.

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RNA molecules perform a variety of functions in cells, many of which rely on their secondary and tertiary structures. Chemical probing methods coupled with high-throughput sequencing have significantly accelerated the mapping of RNA structures, and increasingly large datasets of transcriptome-wide RNA chemical probing data are becoming available. Analogously to what has been done for decades in the protein world, this RNA structural information can be leveraged to aid the discovery of structural similarity to a known RNA (or RNA family), which, in turn, can inform about the function of transcripts.

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Chemical probing of RNA 2'-hydroxyl groups by selective 2'-hydroxyl acylation analyzed by primer extension (SHAPE) is a rapid and powerful approach for querying RNA structures in living cells. At reverse transcription, sites of chemical modification can be encoded as mutations in the cDNA, a process called mutational profiling (MaP), enabling their detection via high-throughput sequencing. This chapter describes how to synthesize the SHAPE probe 2-aminopyridine-3-carboxylic acid imidazolide (2A3), how to use it to probe RNA structures in living bacteria, and how to generate Illumina-compatible SHAPE-MaP sequencing libraries.

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Neuroblastoma RAS (NRAS) is an oncogene that is deregulated and highly mutated in cancers including melanomas and acute myeloid leukemias. The 5' untranslated region (UTR) (5' UTR) of the NRAS mRNA contains a G-quadruplex (G4) that regulates translation. Here we report a novel class of small molecule that binds to the G4 structure located in the 5' UTR of the NRAS mRNA.

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