Structure-driven Approaches to Protein-protein Recognition

Structure-driven Approaches to Protein-protein Recognition

Author: Julian Mintseris

Publisher:

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13:

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Abstract: Much of our understanding of protein function arises from the cellular context in which the protein operates. While two proteins may be functionally linked in a variety of ways, the most direct way for them to interact is through physical recognition of the protein surface followed by a binding event. If the function of a single protein can be understood in terms of its interactions, then the function of a biological system as a whole can be viewed through the network of protein interactions. I use structure-driven approaches to gain additional insight into the organization of protein interaction networks by showing distinct differences between transient and obligate protein interactions. This important distinction can be detected on a purely structural level by comparing the pair-wise contact frequencies between different types of atoms at the protein complex interface. On the functional level, the distinction can be made by looking at the curated ontology annotations. Proteins involved in transient and obligate interactions have been subject to different levels of evolutionary pressure and traces of these differences can be detected by considering their evolutionary histories. Residues in the interfaces of obligate complexes tend to evolve at a relatively slower rate, allowing them to co-evolve with their interacting partners. In contrast, the plasticity inherent in transient interactions leads to an increased rate of substitution for the interface residues and leaves little or no evidence of correlated mutations. Recent advances in high-throughput proteomic technologies combined with computational approaches have identified large numbers of putative novel interactions. However both experimental and computational approaches tend to do better identifying components of large obligate complexes, while fleeting interactions crucial in systems such as signaling cascades and immune response are harder to predict. To this end, I developed new representations of protein structure and derived empirical potentials for protein-protein docking, improving on our ability to predict the complex structures of transient complexes from individually crystallized components.


Protein-protein Complexes

Protein-protein Complexes

Author: Martin Zacharias

Publisher: World Scientific

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 401

ISBN-13: 184816338X

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Given the immense progress achieved in elucidating protein-protein complex structures and in the field of protein interaction modeling, there is great demand for a book that gives interested researchers/students a comprehensive overview of the field. This book does just that. It focuses on what can be learned about protein-protein interactions from the analysis of protein-protein complex structures and interfaces. What are the driving forces for protein-protein association? How can we extract the mechanism of specific recognition from studying protein-protein interfaces? How can this knowledge be used to predict and design protein-protein interactions (interaction regions and complex structures)? What methods are currently employed to design protein-protein interactions, and how can we influence protein-protein interactions by mutagenesis and small-molecule drugs or peptide mimetics?The book consists of about 15 review chapters, written by experts, on the characterization of protein-protein interfaces, structure determination of protein complexes (by NMR and X-ray), theory of protein-protein binding, dynamics of protein interfaces, bioinformatics methods to predict interaction regions, and prediction of protein-protein complex structures (docking and homology modeling of complexes, etc.) and design of protein-protein interactions. It serves as a bridge between studying/analyzing protein-protein complex structures (interfaces), predicting interactions, and influencing/designing interactions.


Protein-protein Recognition

Protein-protein Recognition

Author: Colin Kleanthous

Publisher: Frontiers in Molecular Biology

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13: 9780199637607

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The purpose of Protein-Protein Recognition is to bring together concepts and systems pertaining to protein-protein interactions in a single unifying volume. In the light of the information from the genome sequencing projects and the increase in structural information it is an opportune time totry to make generalizations about how and why proteins form complexes with each other. The emphasis of the book is on heteromeric complexes (complexes in which each of the components can exist in an unbound state) and will use well-studied model systems to explain the processes of formingcomplexes. After an introductory section on the kinetics, thermodynamics, analysis, and classification of protein-protein interactions, weak, intermediate, and high affinity complexes are dealt with in turn. Weak affinity complexes are represented by electron transfer proteins and integrincomplexes. Anti-lysozyme antibodies, the MHC proteins and their interactions with T-cell receptors, and the protein interactions of eukaryotic signal transduction are the systems used to explain complexes with intermediate affinities. Finally, tight binding complexes are represented by theinteraction of protein inhibitors with serine proteases and by nuclease inhibitor complexes. Throughout the chapters common themes are the technologies which have had the greatest impact, how specificity is determined, how complexes are stabilized, and medical and industrial applications.


Structural Biology in Drug Discovery

Structural Biology in Drug Discovery

Author: Jean-Paul Renaud

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2020-01-09

Total Pages: 1367

ISBN-13: 1118900502

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With the most comprehensive and up-to-date overview of structure-based drug discovery covering both experimental and computational approaches, Structural Biology in Drug Discovery: Methods, Techniques, and Practices describes principles, methods, applications, and emerging paradigms of structural biology as a tool for more efficient drug development. Coverage includes successful examples, academic and industry insights, novel concepts, and advances in a rapidly evolving field. The combined chapters, by authors writing from the frontlines of structural biology and drug discovery, give readers a valuable reference and resource that: Presents the benefits, limitations, and potentiality of major techniques in the field such as X-ray crystallography, NMR, neutron crystallography, cryo-EM, mass spectrometry and other biophysical techniques, and computational structural biology Includes detailed chapters on druggability, allostery, complementary use of thermodynamic and kinetic information, and powerful approaches such as structural chemogenomics and fragment-based drug design Emphasizes the need for the in-depth biophysical characterization of protein targets as well as of therapeutic proteins, and for a thorough quality assessment of experimental structures Illustrates advances in the field of established therapeutic targets like kinases, serine proteinases, GPCRs, and epigenetic proteins, and of more challenging ones like protein-protein interactions and intrinsically disordered proteins


Protein Structure Prediction

Protein Structure Prediction

Author: David Webster

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2008-02-03

Total Pages: 425

ISBN-13: 1592593682

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The number of protein sequences grows each year, yet the number of structures deposited in the Protein Data Bank remains relatively small. The importance of protein structure prediction cannot be overemphasized, and this volume is a timely addition to the literature in this field. Protein Structure Prediction: Methods and Protocols is a departure from the normal Methods in Molecular Biology series format. By its very nature, protein structure prediction demands that there be a greater mix of theoretical and practical aspects than is normally seen in this series. This book is aimed at both the novice and the experienced researcher who wish for detailed inf- mation in the field of protein structure prediction; a major intention here is to include important information that is needed in the day-to-day work of a research scientist, important information that is not always decipherable in scientific literature. Protein Structure Prediction: Methods and Protocols covers the topic of protein structure prediction in an eclectic fashion, detailing aspects of pred- tion that range from sequence analysis (a starting point for many algorithms) to secondary and tertiary methods, on into the prediction of docked complexes (an essential point in order to fully understand biological function). As this volume progresses, the authors contribute their expert knowledge of protein structure prediction to many disciplines, such as the identification of motifs and domains, the comparative modeling of proteins, and ab initio approaches to protein loop, side chain, and protein prediction.


Structure-Function Relation In Proteins

Structure-Function Relation In Proteins

Author: Irena Roterman

Publisher:

Published: 2009-01-01

Total Pages: 148

ISBN-13: 9788178954097

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The protein structure seems to be the materialization of the secret of Nature. The structures of proteins seem to be at the first glance the completely random arrangements of the ribbon-like polypeptide chain. The short visual analysis reveals the existence of some ordered fragments called helices or beta-forms. The order may be of two categories: local short range arrangement and multi-units system engaging few ordered fragments into the non-random structural form generation. Majority of the structures are of random form. The question can be asked How random structures are able to participate in quite complicated processes. The search for the method allowing prediction the structure on the basis of amino acid sequence has longer than 40 years history. The progress in this discipline is measured every second year in CASP (Critical Assessment of Structure Prediction) and CAPRI (Critical Assessment of Protein Interaction). This progress is difficult to be recognized as significant. The methods applied for structure prediction treat the structure as the main goal to be reached. Another interpretation is presented in this volume of Recent Advances in Structural Bioinformatics. The different point of view shall be defined before this new strategy may be discussed. The assumption is that the Nature is interested in making the organism to be active. The organism requires many processes to be run properly, in the correct moment, with the appropriate speed and in the correct place. This large set of conditions may be achieved only when all elements participating in the processes called life are precisely well defined in respect to their duties (understood as biological function). The assumption is that the proteins are tools to perform particular jobs. The job of high specificity (the participation in particular process) performed with high precision makes the proteins unique and highly specialized. The search for protein structure shall be changed into the search for the biological function. Assume that the particular biological function is necessary. Particular structure making possible the expected process is the research object for bioinformatics. The protein structure problem can be expressed as follows: Let me know the expected function construction of the tool ensuring the expected function will be the output. The papers presented in this volume undertake attempt to solve the protein structure problem taking the biological function as the main point characteristic for proteins in respect to all other (organic and inorganic molecules) chemical compounds. This is why the review of the methods oriented on protein-protein interaction is presented in the Chapter 1 (In-silico docking: predicting protein-protein interactions - Marcin Król, Alexander L. Tournier, Paul A. Bates). The static and dynamic models have been described there to search for structural elements making the proteins able to generate the protein-protein complexes which are also of high specificity. This is why the method enabling the recognition of biological function of protein is presented in Chapter 2 (Proteins functional sites recognition based on geometric hashing methods - Maurizio Di Stefano, Giovanni Minervini, Fabio Polticelli). The critical elements of proteins responsible for interaction with ligands (also of high specificity) are described as the discrimination criteria for proteins similarities ensuring their biological activity. This is why the influence of ligands on the biological function and protein structure is described in Chapter 3 (Self-assembled organic molecules as non-standard protein ligands experimental and computational studies - Barbara Stopa, Pawel Spólnik, Leszek Konieczny, Barbara Piekarska, Janina Rybarska, Anna Jagusiak, Marcin Król, Irena Roterman). The nice collaboration of experimentalists in immunochemistry with specialists in bioinformatics is described. The modification of the immunoglobulin activity (immunological signal) as dependent on the ligand form is discussed to reveal the structure-to-function relation. This is why the protein structure prediction technique of heuristic character is presented in Chapter 4 (Late stage folding intermediate in silico Irena Roterman, Leszek Konieczny, Michal Brylinski). The model applied attempts to be as close as possible to the experimental observation introducing the protein structure prediction rather as the protein folding simulation implementing the multi-step character of this process. This is why the biological function definition is introduced in Chapter 5 treating the irregularity of hydrophobicity density in protein molecule as the criterion for aim-oriented structural motif (Biological function recognition in silico Irena Roterman, Leszek Konieczny, Michal Brylinski). This is why the active ligand participation in protein folding process is described in the Chapter 6 (Folding process simulated in the presence of specific ligand - Irena Roterman, Leszek Konieczny, Michal Brylinski). The irregularity of hydrophobicity density distribution in protein molecule is assumed to the result of mutual influencing of ligand and folding polypeptide. This ensures also the generation of binding cavity of high specificity. The subject of each paper presented in this volume undertakes the attempt to link the biological function with the structure of protein, which is responsible for particular biological function.


Protein Purification and Analysis I

Protein Purification and Analysis I

Author: IConcept Press Staff

Publisher: CreateSpace

Published: 2013-12

Total Pages: 326

ISBN-13: 9781477555057

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Chapter 1 is a review of the bioinformatics literature on protein-protein interactions (PPIs). A protein-protein interaction network (PPIN) is a collection of PPIs, often deposited in online databases. PPINs may complement other datasets, such as protein structural information. Chapter 2 describes the usability and advantages of the micro-patterning technique to study protein-protein interactions in a live cell context. It summarizes results achieved so far, discusses latest technical developments and describes potential future applications. Chapter 3 describes a strategy for identification of protein peptides cross-linked to radiolabeled RNA derivatives in specific complexes of proteins or ribonucleoproteins with these derivatives. This strategy is alternative to the identification based on mass-spectrometry and can be used for determination of protein sites involved in interactions with specific RNAs when mass-spectrometry is not applicable. Chapter 4 describes biochemical methods for assessing interaction between distinct ligand-gated channels. This chapter proposes also methods to examine functional impact of these receptor-receptor interactions in the nervous system. Chapter 5 proposes a statistical approach based on Structural Equation Modeling, in combination with step-wise factor analysis, to infer protein-DNA interactions for gene transcriptional control in the absence of protein information. Such approach only uses gene expression profiles. Chapter 6 describes procedures for the biochemical analysis of amyloid proteins in transgenic Drosophila, specifically the prion protein. The authors show that protocols from the mammalian literature can be easily adapted and scaled to these small flies and by ensuring robust expression of the prion protein and proper handling of these delicate samples. Chapter 7 discusses DEAD-box proteins. DEAD-box protein family members participate in many aspects of RNA metabolism, particularly in the ATP-driven disruption of secondary structures of RNA. Genes coding for these types of proteins are recognised in all free living bacteria. Chapter 8 provides an experimental model of restriction-modification enzyme fusion and proposes a molecular mechanism for appearance of type IIC restriction-modification and M.SsoII-related enzymes, as well as other multifunctional proteins. Chapter 9 describes the role of branched chain amino acids, leucine, isoleucine and valine, in exercise with respect to performance, muscle kinetics, fatigue and immunity. It also discusses the existing evidence on any superior benefits of branched chain amino acid supplements to exercising individuals and athletes. Chapter 10 provides an overview of the protein-peptide based research in dermatology and the recent emergence of many new dermatologic therapeutic modalities. Chapter 11 summarizes the adverse health effects of prenatal or early postnatal exposure to environmental pollutants (lead, arsenic and dioxins are the best known), pharmaceuticals, some food additives, and other chemicals through the mechanism of cell deprogramming or imprinting. Chapter 12 put forward 2D-PAGE as an important tool, especially for clinical laboratories involved in the determination of protein expression levels and disease biomarker discovery. Chapter 13 shows how to investigate and characterize an open reading frame, from exploiting the similarity in amino acid sequence, until the cloning, expression, purification and activity of the protein and its biological partners. Chapter 14 focuses on the cloning, heterologous expression and physicochemical characterization of Als5, one of the GPI-anchored adhesins from Candida albicans.


Protein Structure

Protein Structure

Author: Daniel Chasman

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2003-03-18

Total Pages: 534

ISBN-13: 0824748166

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This text offers in-depth perspectives on every aspect of protein structure identification, assessment, characterization, and utilization, for a clear understanding of the diversity of protein shapes, variations in protein function, and structure-based drug design. The authors cover numerous high-throughput technologies as well as computational methods to study protein structures and residues. A valuable reference, this book reflects current trends in the effort to solve new structures arising from genome initiatives, details methods to detect and identify errors in the prediction of protein structural models, and outlines challenges in the conversion of routine processes into high-throughput platforms.