Hi, as per the title, is there a convention for the order of naming base pairs in a publication? Is there even a convention or rules? Naming bases from 5' to 3' appears sensible to me, yet from the paper I'm referencing "a Watson-Crick G15•C10 base pair, a base triple of [A23•G8] •A11") wouldn't C10•G15 and [G8•A23]•A11 make more sense? Or is there some overriding rule?
[edit] For context, this is regarding the description of nucleic acid aptamer structures. The paper can be found here for anyone interested.
Thanks
I believe what is being referenced as 'Watson-Crick' in that quote is short for 'Watson-Crick geometry'. See here or here, etc. for examples. There is often no overriding rule or convention for such thing. You'd have to provide more context for those more familiar to better judge. It may simply be that G15 was known for ages to be important relative something else and when the secondary or 3D structure was determined, it became apparent it was base-paired to C10 in a stem. Rather than bury the reference to the position that a lot of others in the field are familiar with, it is placed first to be prominent. Or maybe G15 is one molecule, i.e., the one more featured in the current study/studied more in the field, and the other C10 is in another? Without more context that is all speculation.
Thanks for your reply, yes they are referring to W-C geometry, I realize now I should have added more context to this post.
I would agree with your thinking on how the order chosen here may have come about.