Issue December 2003

category image Volume 21
No. 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
Alla Kirzhner2
Valery M. Kirzhner2
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

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

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