Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring

Systematic analysis of the statistical and dynamical properties of proteins is critical to understanding cellular events. Extraction of biologically relevant information from a set of high-resolution structures is important because it can provide mechanistic details behind the functional properties...

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Main Authors: Risa Anzai, Yoshiki Asami, Waka Inoue, Hina Ueno, Koya Yamada, Tetsuji Okada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-01-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240584401733133X
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spelling doaj-7eac9187b20d400191bb096ac68c3a942020-11-25T02:02:30ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402018-01-014110.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00510Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoringRisa AnzaiYoshiki AsamiWaka InoueHina UenoKoya YamadaTetsuji OkadaSystematic analysis of the statistical and dynamical properties of proteins is critical to understanding cellular events. Extraction of biologically relevant information from a set of high-resolution structures is important because it can provide mechanistic details behind the functional properties of protein families, enabling rational comparison between families. Most of the current structural comparisons are pairwise-based, which hampers the global analysis of increasing contents in the Protein Data Bank. Additionally, pairing of protein structures introduces uncertainty with respect to reproducibility because it frequently accompanies other settings for superimposition. This study introduces intramolecular distance scoring for the global analysis of proteins, for each of which at least several high-resolution structures are available. As a pilot study, we have tested 300 human proteins and showed that the method is comprehensively used to overview advances in each protein and protein family at the atomic level. This method, together with the interpretation of the model calculations, provide new criteria for understanding specific structural variation in a protein, enabling global comparison of the variability in proteins from different species.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240584401733133XBiophysicsBioinformaticsMolecular biologySystems biologyStructural biologyBiochemistry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Risa Anzai
Yoshiki Asami
Waka Inoue
Hina Ueno
Koya Yamada
Tetsuji Okada
spellingShingle Risa Anzai
Yoshiki Asami
Waka Inoue
Hina Ueno
Koya Yamada
Tetsuji Okada
Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
Heliyon
Biophysics
Bioinformatics
Molecular biology
Systems biology
Structural biology
Biochemistry
author_facet Risa Anzai
Yoshiki Asami
Waka Inoue
Hina Ueno
Koya Yamada
Tetsuji Okada
author_sort Risa Anzai
title Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
title_short Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
title_full Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
title_fullStr Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
title_sort evaluation of variability in high-resolution protein structures by global distance scoring
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Systematic analysis of the statistical and dynamical properties of proteins is critical to understanding cellular events. Extraction of biologically relevant information from a set of high-resolution structures is important because it can provide mechanistic details behind the functional properties of protein families, enabling rational comparison between families. Most of the current structural comparisons are pairwise-based, which hampers the global analysis of increasing contents in the Protein Data Bank. Additionally, pairing of protein structures introduces uncertainty with respect to reproducibility because it frequently accompanies other settings for superimposition. This study introduces intramolecular distance scoring for the global analysis of proteins, for each of which at least several high-resolution structures are available. As a pilot study, we have tested 300 human proteins and showed that the method is comprehensively used to overview advances in each protein and protein family at the atomic level. This method, together with the interpretation of the model calculations, provide new criteria for understanding specific structural variation in a protein, enabling global comparison of the variability in proteins from different species.
topic Biophysics
Bioinformatics
Molecular biology
Systems biology
Structural biology
Biochemistry
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240584401733133X
work_keys_str_mv AT risaanzai evaluationofvariabilityinhighresolutionproteinstructuresbyglobaldistancescoring
AT yoshikiasami evaluationofvariabilityinhighresolutionproteinstructuresbyglobaldistancescoring
AT wakainoue evaluationofvariabilityinhighresolutionproteinstructuresbyglobaldistancescoring
AT hinaueno evaluationofvariabilityinhighresolutionproteinstructuresbyglobaldistancescoring
AT koyayamada evaluationofvariabilityinhighresolutionproteinstructuresbyglobaldistancescoring
AT tetsujiokada evaluationofvariabilityinhighresolutionproteinstructuresbyglobaldistancescoring
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