Issue December 2003

category image Volume 21
No. 3 (p 311-468)
December 2003
ISSN 0739-1102

Protein Sequences Yield a Proteomic Code (p. 317-326)

Analysis of crystallized protein structures suggests that globular proteins are organized as consecutively connected units of 25-35 residues. These units are closed loops, that is returns of the polypeptide chain trajectory to a close contact with itself. This universal feature of apparently polymer-statistical nature is a basis for a principally novel view on the globular proteins as loop fold structures. The same unit size has been detected in protein sequences translated from complete prokaryotic genomes by positional autocorrelation analysis, which strongly indicates the evolutionary connection of the units. The units are further characterized by prototype sequences matching to their numerous derivatives in the translated genomes. The matches to five strongest prokaryotic prototypes and three prototypes of C. elegans are identified in the sequences of crystallized proteins, and their structures analyzed. Corresponding segments of the polypeptide chains in majority of cases form closed loops, though evolutionary fate of every prototype element is shown to be rather diverse. Then loop ends can be separated by a sequence-wise distant segments and stabilized by the spatial interactions in the context of the overall globular structure. The units belong to a presumably limited spectrum of the sequence prototypes, full repertoire of which would constitute a proteomic code.

Igor N. Berezovsky1,*,a
Alla Kirzhner2
Valery M. Kirzhner2
Vladimir R. Rosenfeld2
Edward N. Trifonov1,2

1Department of Structural Biology
The Weizmann Institute of Science
P.O.B. 26
Rehovot 76100, Israel
2Genome Diversity Center
Institute of Evolution
University of Haifa
Haifa 31905, Israel

aCurrent Address:
Dept. of Chemistry and Chemical Biology
Harvard University
12 Oxford Street M-105
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
*inberez@fas.harvard.edu

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