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CHAPTER 24. RNA STRUCTURE 505 Figure 24.3: The marginal base pair probability of all possible base pairs. • Include coaxial stacking energy rules. Include free energy increments of coaxial stacking for adjacent helices [Mathews et al., 2004]. • Apply base pairing constraints. With base pairing constraints, you can easily add experimental constraints to your folding algorithm. When you are computing suboptimal structures, it is not possible to apply base pair constraints. The possible base pairing constraints are: Force two equal length intervals to form a stem. Prohibit two equal length intervals to form a stem. Prohibit all nucleotides in a selected region to be a part of a base pair. Base pairing constraints have to be added to the sequence before you can use this option - see below. • Maximum distance between paired bases. Forces the algorithms to only consider RNA structures of a given upper length by setting a maximum distance between the base pair that opens a structure. Specifying structure constraints Structure constraints can serve two purposes in CLC Main Workbench: they can act as experimental constraints imposed on the MFE structure prediction algorithm or they can form a structure hypothesis to be evaluated using the partition function (see section 24.1.3). To force two regions to form a stem, open a normal sequence view and: Select the two regions you want to force by pressing Ctrl while selecting - (use on Mac) | right-click the selection | Add Structure Prediction Constraints| Force Stem Here This will add an annotation labeled "Forced Stem" to the sequence (see figure 24.5).