Analysis of protein circular dichroism spectra for secondary structure using a simple matrix multiplication
โ Scribed by Larry A. Compton; W.Curtis Johnson Jr.
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 960 KB
- Volume
- 155
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Inverse circular dichroism (CD) spectra are presented for each of the five major secondary structures of proteins: alpha-helix, antiparallel and parallel beta-sheet, beta-turn, and other (random) structures. The fraction of the each secondary structure in a protein is predicted by forming the dot product of the corresponding inverse CD spectrum, expressed as a vector, with the CD spectrum of the protein digitized in the same way. We show how this method is based on the construction of the generalized inverse from the singular value decomposition of a set of CD spectra corresponding to proteins whose secondary structures are known from X-ray crystallography. These inverse spectra compute secondary structure directly from protein CD spectra without resorting to least-squares fitting and standard matrix inversion techniques. In addition, spectra corresponding to the individual secondary structures, analogous to the CD spectra of synthetic polypeptides, are generated from the five most significant CD eigenvectors.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The estimation of protein secondary structure from circular dichroism spectra is described by a multivariate linear model with noise (Gauss-Markoff model). With this formalism the adequacy of the linear model is investigated, paying special attention to the estimation of the error in the secondary s
We have expanded our reference set of proteins used in the estimation of protein secondary structure by CD spectroscopy from 29 to 37 proteins by including 3 additional globular proteins with known X-ray structure and 5 denatured proteins. We have also modified the self-consistent method for analyzi
Gaining information on the secondary structure of a protein from its spectra is presented as a calibration problem. The secondary structures known from X-ray studies and the spectra of 21 proteins are represented by a linear model. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra from 1700 to \(1600 \mathr