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Cataloging topologies of protein folding patterns

✍ Scribed by Arun S. Konagurthu; Arthur M. Lesk


Book ID
102372872
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
256 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0952-3499

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Comparing and classifying protein folding patterns allows organizing the known structures, structure search and retrieval, and investigation of general principles of protein architecture. We have been developing a concise tableau representation of protein folding patterns, based on the order and contact patterns of elements of secondary structure: helices and strands of sheet (Lesk, 1995; Kamat and Lesk, 2007; Konagurthu et al., 2008). The tableaux provide a database, derived from the world‐wide protein data bank, mineable in studies of protein architecture, including: (i) determination of statistical properties of secondary structure contacts in an unbiased set of protein domains, (ii) investigations of the range of, and relationships among, protein topologies, (iii) investigation of the relationship between local structure of proteins and the complete folding topology, (iv) potential for fold identification from amino acid sequence, and (v) the basis for a complete enumeration of possible protein folding patterns, which can be compared with the corpus of known structures. Copyright Β© 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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## Abstract Various topologies for representing 3D protein structures have been advanced for purposes ranging from prediction of folding rates to ab initio structure prediction. Examples include relative contact order, Delaunay tessellations, and backbone torsion angle distributions. Here, we intro