Literature DB >> 19430580

Discovery of Recurrent Sequence Motifs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cell Wall Proteins.

Juan E Coronado1, Susan L Epstein, Wei-Gang Qiu, Peter N Lipke.   

Abstract

This paper describes a procedure for the discovery of recurrent substrings in amino acid sequences of proteins, and its application to fungal cell walls. The evolutionary origins of fungal cell walls are an open biological question. This question can be approached by studies of similarity among the sequences and sub-sequences of fungal wall proteins and by comparison to proteins in animals. We describe here how we have discovered building blocks, represented as recurrent sequence motifs (sub-sequences), within fungal cell wall proteins. These motifs have not been systematically identified before, because the low Shannon entropy of the cell wall sequences has hindered searches for local sequence similarities by sequence alignments. Nonetheless, our new, composition-based scoring matrices for local alignment searches now support statistically valid alignments for such low entropy sequences (Coronado et al. 2006. Euk. Cell 5: 628-637). We have now searched for similarities in a set of 171 known and putative cell wall proteins from baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The aligned segments were repeatedly subdivided and catalogued to identify 217 recurrent sequence motifs of length 8 amino acids or greater. 95% of these motifs occur in more than one cell wall protein. The median length of the motifs is 22 amino acid residues, considerably shorter than protein domains. For many cell wall proteins, these motifs collectively account for more than half of their amino acids. The prevalence of these motifs supports the idea of fungal cell wall proteins as assemblies of recurrent building blocks.

Entities:  

Year:  2007        PMID: 19430580      PMCID: PMC2678842     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Match (Mulh)        ISSN: 0340-6253            Impact factor:   2.497


  21 in total

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3.  Methods and algorithms for statistical analysis of protein sequences.

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Review 6.  Sexual agglutination in budding yeasts: structure, function, and regulation of adhesion glycoproteins.

Authors:  P N Lipke; J Kurjan
Journal:  Microbiol Rev       Date:  1992-03

7.  Using CLUSTAL for multiple sequence alignments.

Authors:  D G Higgins; J D Thompson; T J Gibson
Journal:  Methods Enzymol       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 1.600

8.  In silicio identification of glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored plasma-membrane and cell wall proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Authors:  L H Caro; H Tettelin; J H Vossen; A F Ram; H van den Ende; F M Klis
Journal:  Yeast       Date:  1997-12       Impact factor: 3.239

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Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2006-02-22       Impact factor: 5.157

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Authors:  Kevin J Verstrepen; Frans M Klis
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2006-04       Impact factor: 3.501

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  3 in total

Review 1.  On the evolution of fungal and yeast cell walls.

Authors:  Xianfa Xie; Peter N Lipke
Journal:  Yeast       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 3.239

2.  Phylogenetic relationships of the wall-synthesizing enzymes of Basidiomycota confirm the phylogeny of their subphyla.

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Journal:  Folia Microbiol (Praha)       Date:  2014-10-10       Impact factor: 2.099

Review 3.  What We Do Not Know about Fungal Cell Adhesion Molecules.

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Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2018-05-17
  3 in total

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