The interwinding nature of protein protein interfaces and its implication for protein complex formation

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Abstract

Motivation: Structural features at protein-protein interfaces can be studied to understand protein-protein interactions. It was noticed that in a dataset of 45 multimeric proteins the interface could either be described as flat against flat or protruding/interwound. In the latter, residues within one chain were surrounded by those in other chains, whereas in the former they were not. Results: A simple method was developed that could distinguish between these two types with results that matched those made by a human annotator. Applying this automatic method to a large dataset of 888 structures, chains at interfaces were categorized as non-surrounded or surrounded. It was found that the surrounded set had a significantly lower folding tendency using a sequence based measure, than the non-surrounded set. This suggests that before complexation, surrounded chains are relatively unstable and may be involved in 'fly-casting'. This is supported by the finding that terminal regions are overrepresented in the surrounded set. © The Author(s) 2009. Published by Oxford University Press.

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APA

Yura, K., & Hayward, S. (2009). The interwinding nature of protein protein interfaces and its implication for protein complex formation. Bioinformatics, 25(23), 3108–3113. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btp563

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