
The topological filtration of interacting RNA complexes is studied and the role is analyzed of certain diagrams called irreducible shadows, which form suitable building blocks for more general structures. We prove that for two interacting RNAs, called interaction structures, there exist for fixed genus only finitely many irreducible shadows. This implies that for fixed genus there are only finitely many classes of interaction structures. In particular the simplest case of genus zero already provides the formalism for certain types of structures that occur in nature and are not covered by other filtrations. This case of genus zero interaction structures is already of practical interest, is studied here in detail and found to be expressed by a multiple context-free grammar extending the usual one for RNA secondary structures. We show that in $O(n^6)$ time and $O(n^4)$ space complexity, this grammar for genus zero interaction structures provides not only minimum free energy solutions but also the complete partition function and base pairing probabilities.
40 pages 15 figures
partition function, RNA interaction structure, 500, Models, Theoretical, algorithms, 510, topological genus, FOS: Mathematics, Mathematics - Combinatorics, Nucleic Acid Conformation, RNA, Thermodynamics, Combinatorics (math.CO), 32Q55, Algorithms, irreducible shadow
partition function, RNA interaction structure, 500, Models, Theoretical, algorithms, 510, topological genus, FOS: Mathematics, Mathematics - Combinatorics, Nucleic Acid Conformation, RNA, Thermodynamics, Combinatorics (math.CO), 32Q55, Algorithms, irreducible shadow
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