Issue December 2003No. 3 (p 311-468) December 2003 ISSN 0739-1102 Spelling Protein Structure (p. 327-340)Recent sequence analysis of complete prokaryotic proteomes suggests that in early evolutionary stages proteins were rather small, of the size 25-35 amino acids. Corroborating evidence comes from protein crystal data, which indicate this size for closed loops ? universal structural units of globular proteins. In the latest development we were able to derive and structurally characterize several sequence/structure prototypes apparently representing early protein units. Structurally the prototypes appear as closed loops stabilized by end-to-end van der Waals interactions. While nearly standard in size the loops are highly diverse in terms of their secondary structure. A presentation of the protein as an assembly of descendants of the prototypes, the first of its kind, is described in detail here. The sequence and structure of the ATP-binding subunit of histidine permease of S. typhimurium is shown to contain several modified copies of different prototype elements, closed loops, and, thus, can be spelled as: x-PI-x-PIV-PVI-PII-PVII-x, where PI-PVII are the prototype elements. This study sets up the basic principles for the sequence/structure prototype spelling of globular proteins.
Key words: Sequence/structure prototype, Protein structure, Prototype units, Proteomic code, Spelling protein structure, Loop-n-lock elements. Igor N. Berezovsky1,*,a 1Department of Structural Biology Subscription is more cost effective than purchasing PDFs on-the-fly. Click here for details. |