SsnA RNA motif explained

ssnA
Symbol:ssnA
Rfam:RF03031
Rna Type:Cis-reg

The ssnA RNA motif is a conserved RNA structure that was discovered by bioinformatics.[1] ssnA motif RNAs are found in Clostridiales.

ssnA motif RNAs likely function as cis-regulatory elements, in view of their positions upstream of protein-coding genes. Specifically, they occur upstream of genes that are homologous to the ssnA gene of Escherichia coli, even though ssnA RNAs are not themselves in E. coli, or related organisms. This gene's biological function is not yet known (as of 2018), but it is predicted as a type of metallo-dependent hydrolase. ssnA RNAs are closely (within 20–30 base pairs) by Rho-independent transcription terminators.

Notes and References

  1. Weinberg Z, Lünse CE, Corbino KA, Ames TD, Nelson JW, Roth A, Perkins KR, Sherlock ME, Breaker RR . Detection of 224 candidate structured RNAs by comparative analysis of specific subsets of intergenic regions . Nucleic Acids Res. . 45 . 18 . 10811–10823 . October 2017 . 28977401 . 5737381 . 10.1093/nar/gkx699 .