Literature DB >> 8182744

Use of amino acid environment-dependent substitution tables and conformational propensities in structure prediction from aligned sequences of homologous proteins. II. Secondary structures.

H Wako1, T L Blundell.   

Abstract

A three-step method is presented to predict secondary structures of proteins, by utilizing aligned sequences of homologous proteins. Mean propensities and amino acid substitution patterns at a given site in the aligned sequences are first evaluated for four conformational states (i.e. alpha-helix, beta-strand, buried coil and exposed coil). Capping rules are applied in order to define boundaries of the secondary-structure segments more precisely. In the second step beta-strand is predicted by searching regions predicted as coil for the two patterns characteristic of alternating and fully buried beta-strands. The complete sequences of the solvent-accessibility classes predicted by substitution tables and propensities are also searched using Fourier transform methods for alpha-helical periodicity. After applying capping rules, the alpha-helices and beta-strands predicted in the second step replace, where appropriate, the conformational states predicted in the first step. Finally, in the third step, if one of the four conformational states is assigned to the residues at an equivalent site of aligned sequences in more than a given fraction of the proteins, such a state is reassigned to all the residues at that site. The method is applied to 13 protein families, which contain four folding types, alpha, beta, alpha/beta and alpha + beta. The accuracy of the prediction ranges from 60 to 79% (mean percentage over the 13 families is 69%). For comparison the Garnier-Osguthorpe-Robson (GOR) method is also applied to them. Although the mean prediction accuracy for the GOR method, 58%, can be improved to 63% by applying the second and third steps in this method, there remain four families with less than 55% accuracy. The mean accuracy is relatively higher and poor predictions are reduced in this method.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8182744     DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1994.1330

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  9 in total

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8.  Discarding functional residues from the substitution table improves predictions of active sites within three-dimensional structures.

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Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2008-10-03       Impact factor: 4.475

9.  Can amphipathic helices influence the CNS antinociceptive activity of glycopeptides related to β-endorphin?

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  9 in total

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