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On the properties and sequence context of structurally ambivalent fragments in proteins
Author(s) -
Kuznetsov Igor B.,
Rackovsky S.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1110/ps.03209703
Subject(s) - dihedral angle , sequence (biology) , context (archaeology) , protein structure , peptide sequence , amino acid , protein data bank , crystallography , chemistry , computational biology , biology , genetics , molecule , biochemistry , paleontology , hydrogen bond , organic chemistry , gene
The goal of this work is to characterize structurally ambivalent fragments in proteins. We have searched the Protein Data Bank and identified all structurally ambivalent peptides (SAPs) of length five or greater that exist in two different backbone conformations. The SAPs were classified in five distinct categories based on their structure. We propose a novel index that provides a quantitative measure of conformational variability of a sequence fragment. It measures the context‐dependent width of the distribution of (ϕ,ξ) dihedral angles associated with each amino acid type. This index was used to analyze the local structural propensity of both SAPs and the sequence fragments contiguous to them. We also analyzed type‐specific amino acid composition, solvent accessibility, and overall structural properties of SAPs and their sequence context. We show that each type of SAP has an unusual, type‐specific amino acid composition and, as a result, simultaneous intrinsic preferences for two distinct types of backbone conformation. All types of SAPs have lower sequence complexity than average. Fragments that adopt helical conformation in one protein and sheet conformation in another have the lowest sequence complexity and are sampled from a relatively limited repertoire of possible residue combinations. A statistically significant difference between two distinct conformations of the same SAP is observed not only in the overall structural properties of proteins harboring the SAP but also in the properties of its flanking regions and in the pattern of solvent accessibility. These results have implications for protein design and structure prediction.

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