Literature DB >> 33639968

Quantifying steric hindrance and topological obstruction to protein structure superposition.

Peter Røgen1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In computational structural biology, structure comparison is fundamental for our understanding of proteins. Structure comparison is, e.g., algorithmically the starting point for computational studies of structural evolution and it guides our efforts to predict protein structures from their amino acid sequences. Most methods for structural alignment of protein structures optimize the distances between aligned and superimposed residue pairs, i.e., the distances traveled by the aligned and superimposed residues during linear interpolation. Considering such a linear interpolation, these methods do not differentiate if there is room for the interpolation, if it causes steric clashes, or more severely, if it changes the topology of the compared protein backbone curves.
RESULTS: To distinguish such cases, we analyze the linear interpolation between two aligned and superimposed backbones. We quantify the amount of steric clashes and find all self-intersections in a linear backbone interpolation. To determine if the self-intersections alter the protein's backbone curve significantly or not, we present a path-finding algorithm that checks if there exists a self-avoiding path in a neighborhood of the linear interpolation. A new path is constructed by altering the linear interpolation using a novel interpretation of Reidemeister moves from knot theory working on three-dimensional curves rather than on knot diagrams. Either the algorithm finds a self-avoiding path or it returns a smallest set of essential self-intersections. Each of these indicates a significant difference between the folds of the aligned protein structures. As expected, we find at least one essential self-intersection separating most unknotted structures from a knotted structure, and we find even larger motions in proteins connected by obstruction free linear interpolations. We also find examples of homologous proteins that are differently threaded, and we find many distinct folds connected by longer but simple deformations. TM-align is one of the most restrictive alignment programs. With standard parameters, it only aligns residues superimposed within 5 Ångström distance. We find 42165 topological obstructions between aligned parts in 142068 TM-alignments. Thus, this restrictive alignment procedure still allows topological dissimilarity of the aligned parts.
CONCLUSIONS: Based on the data we conclude that our program ProteinAlignmentObstruction provides significant additional information to alignment scores based solely on distances between aligned and superimposed residue pairs.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Protein topology; Self-avoiding morphs; Structural classification of proteins

Year:  2021        PMID: 33639968      PMCID: PMC7913338          DOI: 10.1186/s13015-020-00180-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Algorithms Mol Biol        ISSN: 1748-7188            Impact factor:   1.405


  8 in total

1.  Protein similarity from knot theory: geometric convolution and line weavings.

Authors:  Michael A Erdmann
Journal:  J Comput Biol       Date:  2005 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.479

Review 2.  Advances and pitfalls of protein structural alignment.

Authors:  Hitomi Hasegawa; Liisa Holm
Journal:  Curr Opin Struct Biol       Date:  2009-05-27       Impact factor: 6.809

3.  PyKnot: a PyMOL tool for the discovery and analysis of knots in proteins.

Authors:  Rhonald C Lua
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2012-05-18       Impact factor: 6.937

4.  FlexE: Using elastic network models to compare models of protein structure.

Authors:  Alberto Perez; Zheng Yang; Ivet Bahar; Ken A Dill; Justin L MacCallum
Journal:  J Chem Theory Comput       Date:  2012-10-09       Impact factor: 6.006

5.  A library of protein surface patches discriminates between native structures and decoys generated by structure prediction servers.

Authors:  Roi Gamliel; Klara Kedem; Rachel Kolodny; Chen Keasar
Journal:  BMC Struct Biol       Date:  2011-05-04

6.  TM-align: a protein structure alignment algorithm based on the TM-score.

Authors:  Yang Zhang; Jeffrey Skolnick
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2005-04-22       Impact factor: 16.971

Review 7.  Knotted proteins: A tangled tale of Structural Biology.

Authors:  Patrícia F N Faísca
Journal:  Comput Struct Biotechnol J       Date:  2015-08-19       Impact factor: 7.271

8.  lDDT: a local superposition-free score for comparing protein structures and models using distance difference tests.

Authors:  Valerio Mariani; Marco Biasini; Alessandro Barbato; Torsten Schwede
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2013-08-27       Impact factor: 6.937

  8 in total

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