Literature DB >> 17206659

Contact patterns between helices and strands of sheet define protein folding patterns.

Akhil P Kamat1, Arthur M Lesk.   

Abstract

Comparing and classifying protein folding patterns allows organizing the known structures and enumerating possible protein structural patterns including those not yet observed. We capture the essence of protein folding patterns in a concise tableau representation based on the order and contact patterns of secondary structures: helices and strands of sheet. The tableaux are intelligible to both humans and computers. They provide a database, derived from the Protein Data Bank, mineable in studies of protein architecture. Using this database, we have: (i) determined statistical properties of secondary structure contacts in an unbiased set of protein domains from ASTRAL, (ii) observed that in 98% of cases, the tableau is a faithful representation of the folding pattern as classified in SCOP, (iii) demonstrated that to a large extent the local structure of proteins indicates their complete folding topology, and (iv) studied the use of the representation for fold identification. (c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17206659     DOI: 10.1002/prot.21241

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


  16 in total

1.  Building native protein conformation from NMR backbone chemical shifts using Monte Carlo fragment assembly.

Authors:  Haipeng Gong; Yang Shen; George D Rose
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2007-08       Impact factor: 6.725

2.  Reconstruction and stability of secondary structure elements in the context of protein structure prediction.

Authors:  Alexei A Podtelezhnikov; David L Wild
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2009-06-03       Impact factor: 4.033

3.  Improving strand pairing prediction through exploring folding cooperativity.

Authors:  Jieun Jeong; Piotr Berman; Teresa M Przytycka
Journal:  IEEE/ACM Trans Comput Biol Bioinform       Date:  2008 Oct-Dec       Impact factor: 3.710

4.  Structures, basins, and energies: a deconstruction of the Protein Coil Library.

Authors:  Lauren L Perskie; Timothy O Street; George D Rose
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2008-04-23       Impact factor: 6.725

5.  An amino acid packing code for α-helical structure and protein design.

Authors:  Hyun Joo; Archana G Chavan; Jamie Phan; Ryan Day; Jerry Tsai
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2012-03-15       Impact factor: 5.469

6.  Computational analysis of C-reactive protein for assessment of molecular dynamics and interaction properties.

Authors:  Chiranjib Chakraborty; Alok Agrawal
Journal:  Cell Biochem Biophys       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 2.194

7.  Fast and accurate protein substructure searching with simulated annealing and GPUs.

Authors:  Alex D Stivala; Peter J Stuckey; Anthony I Wirth
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2010-09-03       Impact factor: 3.169

8.  Tableau-based protein substructure search using quadratic programming.

Authors:  Alex Stivala; Anthony Wirth; Peter J Stuckey
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2009-05-19       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  ProSMoS server: a pattern-based search using interaction matrix representation of protein structures.

Authors:  Shuoyong Shi; Bhadrachalam Chitturi; Nick V Grishin
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2009-05-06       Impact factor: 16.971

10.  Implicit Solvation Parameters Derived from Explicit Water Forces in Large-Scale Molecular Dynamics Simulations.

Authors:  Jens Kleinjung; Walter R P Scott; Jane R Allison; Wilfred F van Gunsteren; Franca Fraternali
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2012-06-12       Impact factor: 6.006

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