## The vertebrate Y-box proteins Structure and nucleic acid recognition The eukaryotic Y-box proteins were initially characterized through their interaction with duplex DNA containing the sequence CAAT('-7). The deduced amino acid sequence for the vertebrate proteins revealed an almost identically
Predicting nucleic acid binding interfaces from structural models of proteins
✍ Scribed by Iris Dror; Shula Shazman; Srayanta Mukherjee; Yang Zhang; Fabian Glaser; Yael Mandel-Gutfreund
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 736 KB
- Volume
- 80
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-3585
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The function of DNA‐ and RNA‐binding proteins can be inferred from the characterization and accurate prediction of their binding interfaces. However, the main pitfall of various structure‐based methods for predicting nucleic acid binding function is that they are all limited to a relatively small number of proteins for which high‐resolution three‐dimensional structures are available. In this study, we developed a pipeline for extracting functional electrostatic patches from surfaces of protein structural models, obtained using the I‐TASSER protein structure predictor. The largest positive patches are extracted from the protein surface using the patchfinder algorithm. We show that functional electrostatic patches extracted from an ensemble of structural models highly overlap the patches extracted from high‐resolution structures. Furthermore, by testing our pipeline on a set of 55 known nucleic acid binding proteins for which I‐TASSER produces high‐quality models, we show that the method accurately identifies the nucleic acids binding interface on structural models of proteins. Employing a combined patch approach we show that patches extracted from an ensemble of models better predicts the real nucleic acid binding interfaces compared with patches extracted from independent models. Overall, these results suggest that combining information from a collection of low‐resolution structural models could be a valuable approach for functional annotation. We suggest that our method will be further applicable for predicting other functional surfaces of proteins with unknown structure. Proteins 2012. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The multidimensional statistical technique of discriminant analysis is used to allocate amino acid sequences to one of four secondary structural classes: high a content, high / 3 content, mixed a and @, low content of ordered structure. Discrimination is based on four attributes: estimates of percen
## Abstract Protein domain family PF09905 (DUF2132) is a family of small domains of unknown function that are conserved in a wide range of bacteria. Here we describe the solution NMR structure of the 80‐residue VF0530 protein from __Vibrio fischeri__, the first structural representative from this p
The Xenopus CNBP homologue (XCNBP) has been cloned from stage 14 neurula. XCNBP encodes a 18.4-kDa protein containing seven highly conserved zinc finger (Zn-finger) repeats (CX 2 CX 4 HX 4 CX 2 ), with sequence similarity to human, mouse, rat, and yeast CNBP. A unique feature of XCNBP is that it con