Literature DB >> 17109406

Description of atomic burials in compact globular proteins by Fermi-Dirac probability distributions.

Antonio L C Gomes1, Júlia R de Rezende, Antônio F Pereira de Araújo, Eugene I Shakhnovich.   

Abstract

We perform a statistical analysis of atomic distributions as a function of the distance R from the molecular geometrical center in a nonredundant set of compact globular proteins. The number of atoms increases quadratically for small R, indicating a constant average density inside the core, reaches a maximum at a size-dependent distance R(max), and falls rapidly for larger R. The empirical curves turn out to be consistent with the volume increase of spherical concentric solid shells and a Fermi-Dirac distribution in which the distance R plays the role of an effective atomic energy epsilon(R) = R. The effective chemical potential mu governing the distribution increases with the number of residues, reflecting the size of the protein globule, while the temperature parameter beta decreases. Interestingly, betamu is not as strongly dependent on protein size and appears to be tuned to maintain approximately half of the atoms in the high density interior and the other half in the exterior region of rapidly decreasing density. A normalized size-independent distribution was obtained for the atomic probability as a function of the reduced distance, r = R/R(g), where R(g) is the radius of gyration. The global normalized Fermi distribution, F(r), can be reasonably decomposed in Fermi-like subdistributions for different atomic types tau, F(tau)(r), with Sigma(tau)F(tau)(r) = F(r), which depend on two additional parameters mu(tau) and h(tau). The chemical potential mu(tau) affects a scaling prefactor and depends on the overall frequency of the corresponding atomic type, while the maximum position of the subdistribution is determined by h(tau), which appears in a type-dependent atomic effective energy, epsilon(tau)(r) = h(tau)r, and is strongly correlated to available hydrophobicity scales. Better adjustments are obtained when the effective energy is not assumed to be necessarily linear, or epsilon(tau)*(r) = h(tau)*r(alpha,), in which case a correlation with hydrophobicity scales is found for the product alpha(tau)h(tau)*. These results indicate that compact globular proteins are consistent with a thermodynamic system governed by hydrophobic-like energy functions, with reduced distances from the geometrical center, reflecting atomic burials, and provide a conceptual framework for the eventual prediction from sequence of a few parameters from which whole atomic probability distributions and potentials of mean force can be reconstructed. Copyright 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17109406     DOI: 10.1002/prot.21137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proteins        ISSN: 0887-3585


  2 in total

1.  A sequence-compatible amount of native burial information is sufficient for determining the structure of small globular proteins.

Authors:  Antonio F Pereira de Araujo; José N Onuchic
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-10-26       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Prediction of functionally important residues in globular proteins from unusual central distances of amino acids.

Authors:  Marek Kochańczyk
Journal:  BMC Struct Biol       Date:  2011-09-18
  2 in total

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