| Literature DB >> 26798490 |
D Suplatov1, V Švedas1.
Abstract
The interaction of proteins (enzymes) with a variety of low-molecular-weight compounds, as well as protein-protein interactions, is the most important factor in the regulation of their functional properties. To date, research effort has routinely focused on studying ligand binding to the functional sites of proteins (active sites of enzymes), whereas the molecular mechanisms of allosteric regulation, as well as binding to other pockets and cavities in protein structures, remained poorly understood. Recent studies have shown that allostery may be an intrinsic property of virtually all proteins. Novel approaches are needed to systematically analyze the architecture and role of various binding sites and establish the relationship between structure, function, and regulation. Computational biology, bioinformatics, and molecular modeling can be used to search for new regulatory centers, characterize their structural peculiarities, as well as compare different pockets in homologous proteins, study the molecular mechanisms of allostery, and understand the communication between topologically independent binding sites in protein structures. The establishment of an evolutionary relationship between different binding centers within protein superfamilies and the discovery of new functional and allosteric (regulatory) sites using computational approaches can improve our understanding of the structure-function relationship in proteins and provide new opportunities for drug design and enzyme engineering.Entities:
Keywords: allosteric site; bbb; binding sites; bioinformatics; catalytic site; function; regulation; structure-function relationship
Year: 2015 PMID: 26798490 PMCID: PMC4717248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Naturae ISSN: 2075-8251 Impact factor: 1.845
Online services to predict binding sites in protein structures and rank them by functional significance
| Name | On-line address | Algorithm used to identify the binding sites | Algorithm used to rank the binding sites |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fpocket [ |
| Geometric, based on Voronoi tessellation and detection of α-spheres | Statistical, by estimating similarity to known ligand binding sites |
| POCASA [ |
| Geometric, by rolling spherical probes along the protein surface | Geometric, taking into account the position and size of the pocket |
| pocketZebra [ |
| Geometric, based on Voronoi tessellation and detection of α-spheres | Bioinformatic, analysis of subfamily-specific positions in protein superfamilies |
| SiteHound [ |
| Energy-based, by estimating the interaction energy of amino acids at the protein surface with carbon or phosphate chemical probes | Energy-based, by estimating the interaction energy of amino acids at the protein surface with carbon or phosphate chemical probes |
| LIGSITEcsc [ |
| Geometric, based on the calculation of the Connolly surface | Bioinformatic, analysis of conserved positions |