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PDB-wide identification of biological assemblies from conserved quaternary structure geometry
Author(s) -
Sucharita Dey,
David W. Ritchie,
Emmanuel D. Levy
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nature methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.469
H-Index - 318
eISSN - 1548-7105
pISSN - 1548-7091
DOI - 10.1038/nmeth.4510
Subject(s) - protein data bank (rcsb pdb) , protein data bank , set (abstract data type) , relevance (law) , computational biology , annotation , identification (biology) , computer science , protein quaternary structure , protein structure , interpretation (philosophy) , data mining , biology , artificial intelligence , genetics , ecology , biochemistry , protein subunit , political science , gene , law , programming language
Protein structures are key to understanding biomolecular mechanisms and diseases, yet their interpretation is hampered by limited knowledge of their biologically relevant quaternary structure (QS). A critical challenge in inferring QS information from crystallographic data is distinguishing biological interfaces from fortuitous crystal-packing contacts. Here, we tackled this problem by developing strategies for aligning and comparing QS states across both homologs and data repositories. QS conservation across homologs proved remarkably strong at predicting biological relevance and is implemented in two methods, QSalign and anti-QSalign, for annotating homo-oligomers and monomers, respectively. QS conservation across repositories is implemented in QSbio (http://www.QSbio.org), which approaches the accuracy of manual curation and allowed us to predict >100,000 QS states across the Protein Data Bank. Based on this high-quality data set, we analyzed pairs of structurally conserved interfaces, and this analysis revealed a striking plasticity whereby evolutionary distant interfaces maintain similar interaction geometries through widely divergent chemical properties.

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