The existence and functional importance of RNA secondary structure
in the replication of positive-stranded RNA viruses is increasingly
recognized. We applied several computational methods to detect
RNA secondary structure in the coding region of hepatitis C
virus (HCV), including thermodynamic prediction, calculation
of free energy on folding, and a newly developed method to scan
sequences for covariant sites and associated secondary structures
using a parsimony-based algorithm. Each of the prediction methods
provided evidence for complex RNA folding in the core- and
NS5B-encoding regions of the genome. The positioning of covariant
sites and associated predicted stem-loop structures coincided
with thermodynamic predictions of RNA base pairing, and localized
precisely in parts of the genome with marked suppression of
variability at synonymous sites. Combined, there was evidence
for a total of six evolutionarily conserved stem-loop structures
in the NS5B-encoding region and two in the core gene. The virus
most closely related to HCV, GB virus-B (GBV-B) also showed
evidence for similar internal base pairing in its coding region,
although predictions of secondary structures were limited by
the absence of comparative sequence data for this virus. While
the role(s) of stem-loops in the coding region of HCV and GBV-B
are currently unknown, the structure predictions in this study
could provide the starting point for functional investigations
using recently developed self-replicating clones of HCV.