Evolutionary dynamics and optimization: Neutral networks as model-landscapes for RNA secondary-structure folding-landscapes

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Abstract

We view the folding of RNA-sequences as a map that assigns a pattern of base pairings to each sequence, known as secondary structure. These preimages can be constructed as random graphs (i.e. The neutral networks associated lo the structure s). By interpreting the secondary structure as biological information we can formulate the so called Error Threshold of Shapes as an extension of Eigen’s et al. Concept of an error threshold in the single peak landscape [5]. Analogue to the approach of Derrida & Peliti [3] for a flat landscape we investigate the spatial distribution of the population on the neutral network. On the one hand this model of a single shape landscape allows the derivation of analytical results, on the other hand the concept gives rise to study various scenarios by means of simulations, e.g. The interaction of two different networks [29]. It turns out that the intersection of two sets of compatible sequences (with respect to the pair of secondary structures) plays a key role in the search for "fitter" secondary structures.

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Forst, C. V., Reidys, C., & Weber, J. (1995). Evolutionary dynamics and optimization: Neutral networks as model-landscapes for RNA secondary-structure folding-landscapes. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 929, pp. 128–147). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-59496-5_294

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