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1 g through the formation of an autoinhibitory RNA conformation.
2  determining importance of electrostatics in RNA conformation.
3 ding pathway that leads to an aberrant SRP19-RNA conformation.
4  that the pH change significantly alters the RNA conformation.
5 ctions in the stabilisation of the Tat-bound RNA conformation.
6 p region but does not dramatically alter the RNA conformation.
7 o an inactive telomerase RNP with an altered RNA conformation.
8                 It therefore may well affect RNA conformation.
9  coexistence of multiple docked and undocked RNA conformations.
10 e, suggesting a means for sensitively tuning RNA conformations.
11 roscopic probes of the transiently populated RNA conformations.
12 romoting formation of and stabilizing active RNA conformations.
13 cules such as proteins to stabilize specific RNA conformations.
14 o that for other backbones that favor A-form RNA conformations.
15 ctions require transitions among alternative RNA conformations.
16 ot, and potentially the predicted telomerase RNA conformation, affects polymerization to cause the ob
17 ve configurations, including a left-handed Z-RNA conformation and a compact purine Triplet.
18 pressure shows a stabilizing effect on the A-RNA conformation and a destabilization of the left-hande
19 ne uracil), which enables the correlation of RNA conformation and recognition under equilibrium and i
20 itions of the tetraloop into the canonical A-RNA conformation and the presence of two alternative con
21  the importance of their role in determining RNA conformation and their evolutionary origin.
22 ingle molecule fluorescence assay to monitor RNA conformation and virus assembly in real time, with t
23 ginine to form binding surfaces for specific RNA conformations and distinct levels of RNA structural
24 of interrogating nonequilibrium steady-state RNA conformations and the adjustable period of [Mg(2+)]-
25 ws formation of less stable from more stable RNA conformations and thus RNA structure conversion agai
26 understanding of how riboswitches fold, what RNA conformations are required for ligand recognition, a
27 ter resonance energy transfer reports on the RNA conformation as a function of either mono- or divale
28  stretch with two predicted interconvertible RNA conformations, as known from riboswitches, which mig
29 bserved an anomalously broad distribution of RNA conformations at intermediate ion concentrations tha
30   Here, we present six libraries of discrete RNA conformations based on a simplified pseudo-torsional
31  and orientations, we robustly clustered all RNA conformations by employing unique methods to remove
32 everal metal ion binding sites important for RNA conformation can accommodate chemically distinct ion
33                                   Changes in RNA conformation can alter gene expression.
34                          Learning how native RNA conformations can be stabilized relative to unfolded
35                                          The RNA conformation changed upon the introduction of the sy
36 mming (MC-Sym) fragment assembly to generate RNA conformations constrained by secondary structure.
37                 These spontaneous changes in RNA conformation correlate quantitatively with those tha
38 to accurately estimate the probability of an RNA conformation from sequence.
39 1), C4'(n+1)), which can be used to describe RNA conformation in much the same way that varphi and ps
40  with argininamide serves as a model for the RNA conformation in the tat-TAR complex.
41 nging to the DEAD-box superfamily can affect RNA conformation in vitro.
42  lays the foundation for rapidly determining RNA conformations in a structural genomics context, and
43 These data indicate that two highly distinct RNA conformations in the H4a and H4b region can mediate
44                                              RNA conformation is both highly dependent on and sensiti
45                                  The helical RNA conformation is nearest that of A form DNA.
46 and the link between secondary structure and RNA conformation is only beginning to be understood.
47      Near physiological salt concentrations, RNA conformation is sensitive to both helix length and j
48                               This change in RNA conformation likely affects the RNA's suitability fo
49                         These changes in the RNA conformation place the N1 positions of A1492 and A14
50 ition to its important function in sculpting RNA conformation, plays an underappreciated role in modu
51 ve to factors that influence the ensemble of RNA conformations present in the partially unfolded stat
52         Thus, ligands may stabilize existing RNA conformations rather than inducing new ones.
53 ethyladenosine, m (6)A 37, adopted an A-form RNA conformation (rmsd approximately 0.6 A) as determine
54 ing scheme, our CRF model is then applied to RNA conformation sampling.
55  specifically to TAR and induces a change in RNA conformation similar to that induced by Tat peptides
56 ategy to further stabilize a natively folded RNA conformation suggests an important element of modula
57 aled that the selected sequences restored an RNA conformation that facilitates recognition of the AAU
58 y valuable for exploring adaptive changes in RNA conformation that occur in response to biologically
59                                   First, the RNA conformation that presents an accessible rut site pr
60                                          The RNA conformation that promotes Rho-dependent termination
61 ding of S8 leads to a dramatic change in the RNA conformation that restores the signature S8 recognit
62  its associated coding region by favoring an RNA conformation that sequesters RARE.
63  bias the free-energy landscape toward a few RNA conformations that are competent to add the secondar
64 roscopy revealed distinct mutually exclusive RNA conformations that are differentially populated in t
65  energy transfer (smFRET) to probe the viral RNA conformations that occur during RNAP binding and ini
66          Locally, Mg(2+) association affects RNA conformation through tertiary bridging interactions;
67 unphosphorylated p40AUF1 induces a condensed RNA conformation upon ARE substrates.
68 t decreased RNA hydrogen bonding and changed RNA conformation upon IRP1 binding and illustrate how sm
69                    iFoldRNA rapidly explores RNA conformations using discrete molecular dynamics simu
70 ectrophoresis experiments showed that the 3' RNA conformation was indeed altered by nucleotide substi
71 ong the ribosomal RNA, stabilizing transient RNA conformations, while RNA folding and the early stage
72 ndicated the presence of a highly structured RNA conformation with a significant amount of A-form hel
73                             The evolution of RNA conformation with Mg(2+) concentration ([Mg(2+)]) is
74  gel electrophoresis is a sensitive probe of RNA conformation with the capability to detect differenc

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