Classification of proteins: Available structural space for molecular modeling

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Abstract

The wealth of available protein structural data provides unprecedented opportunity to study and better understand the underlying principles of protein folding and protein structure evolution. A key to achieving this lies in the ability to analyse these data and to organize them in a coherent classification scheme. Over the past years several protein classifications have been developed that aim to group proteins based on their structural relationships. Some of these classification schemes explore the concept of structural neighbourhood (structural continuum), whereas other utilize the notion of protein evolution and thus provide a discrete rather than continuum view of protein structure space. This chapter presents a strategy for classification of proteins with known three-dimensional structure. Steps in the classification process along with basic definitions are introduced. Examples illustrating some fundamental concepts of protein folding and evolution with a special focus on the exceptions to them are presented. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media,LLC.

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Andreeva, A. (2012). Classification of proteins: Available structural space for molecular modeling. Methods in Molecular Biology, 857, 1–31. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-588-6_1

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