## Abstract Moments of the distributions of the __C__^α^ and “side‐chain atoms” and associated properties were examined in 22 globular proteins, considered as statistical aggregates of atoms. Although the distributions are generally anisotropic, the densities of the evaluated distributions are high
Correlation of sequence and tertiary structure in globular proteins
✍ Scribed by Gordon M. Crippen
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 711 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The x‐ray crystal structures of 19 selected proteins are examined empirically for correlations between the amino acid sequence and long‐range, tertiary conformation. There is clear evidence for preferential associations of certain types of amino acids, particularly among the hydrophobic aliphatic, aromatic, and cysteine residues. However, the likelihoods of forming these residue‐pair contacts are all less than 12%, so packing and geometric requirements must often take precedent over energetic considerations. The prediction of long‐range contacts is not substantially improved by taking into account the sequentially previous residues. The analysis of atom–atom contacts shows a similar lack of predictive ability, but the results show that a good approximation to the interresidue energy function must include different types of interactions at two or three different sites on some amino acids. Backbone–backbone long‐range interactions are relatively rare and nonspecific, whereas some “polar” side chains form hydrogen bonds from the polar groups while occasionally forming hydrophobic contacts with the remainder of the chain.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
We examined the variation in the solvent accessibility and hydrophobicity of the amino acids along the sequences of 58 soluble globular proteins with known tertiary structure. We found that there is a significant tendency for the accessibilities to run in clusters along the sequence but that the hyd
Correlation functions in large sets of non-homologous protein sequences are analysed. Finite size corrections are applied and fluctuations are estimated. As symbol sequences have to be mapped to sequences of numbers to calculate correlation functions, several property codes are tested as such mappin
## Abstract The sequence‐specific assignment of resonances is still the most time‐consuming procedure that is necessary as the first step in high‐resolution NMR studies of proteins. In many cases a reliable three‐dimensional (3D) structure of the protein is available, for example, from X‐ray spectr
Heat denaturation of native globular proteins is a cooperative process usually connected with the melting of the main part of their regular secondary structure. In this paper, a noncooperative temperature-induced melting of the regular secondary structure in the carbonic anhydrase B at pH 2.6 in hea