Abstract
The computer artificial intelligence system AlphaFold has recently predicted previously unknown three-dimensional structures of thousands of proteins. Focusing on the subset with high-confidence scores, we algorithmically analyze these predictions for cases where the protein backbone exhibits rare topological complexity, that is, knotting. Amongst others, we discovered a 71-knot, the most topologically complex knot ever found in a protein, as well several six-crossing composite knots comprised of two methyltransferase or carbonic anhydrase domains, each containing a simple trefoil knot. These deeply embedded composite knots occur evidently by gene duplication and interconnection of knotted dimers. Finally, we report two new five-crossing knots including the first 51-knot. Our list of analyzed structures forms the basis for future experimental studies to confirm these novel-knotted topologies and to explore their complex folding mechanisms.
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Brems, M. A., Runkel, R., Yeates, T. O., & Virnau, P. (2022). AlphaFold predicts the most complex protein knot and composite protein knots. Protein Science, 31(8). https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.4380
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