Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.

Related protein domains of a superfamily can be specified by proteins of diverse lengths. The structural and functional implications of indels in a domain scaffold have been examined.In this study, domain superfamilies with large length variations (more than 30% difference from average domain size,...

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Main Authors: Sankaran Sandhya, Saane Sudha Rani, Barah Pankaj, Madabosse Kande Govind, Bernard Offmann, Narayanaswamy Srinivasan, Ramanathan Sowdhamini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2659687?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8616f90a2acf483d8a14d3b1bf77a0d82020-11-24T22:04:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-01-0143e498110.1371/journal.pone.0004981Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.Sankaran SandhyaSaane Sudha RaniBarah PankajMadabosse Kande GovindBernard OffmannNarayanaswamy SrinivasanRamanathan SowdhaminiRelated protein domains of a superfamily can be specified by proteins of diverse lengths. The structural and functional implications of indels in a domain scaffold have been examined.In this study, domain superfamilies with large length variations (more than 30% difference from average domain size, referred as 'length-deviant' superfamilies and 'length-rigid' domain superfamilies (<10% length difference from average domain size) were analyzed for the functional impact of such structural differences. Our delineated dataset, derived from an objective algorithm, enables us to address indel roles in the presence of peculiar structural repeats, functional variation, protein-protein interactions and to examine 'domain contexts' of proteins tolerant to large length variations. Amongst the top-10 length-deviant superfamilies analyzed, we found that 80% of length-deviant superfamilies possess distant internal structural repeats and nearly half of them acquired diverse biological functions. In general, length-deviant superfamilies have higher chance, than length-rigid superfamilies, to be engaged in internal structural repeats. We also found that approximately 40% of length-deviant domains exist as multi-domain proteins involving interactions with domains from the same or other superfamilies. Indels, in diverse domain superfamilies, were found to participate in the accretion of structural and functional features amongst related domains. With specific examples, we discuss how indels are involved directly or indirectly in the generation of oligomerization interfaces, introduction of substrate specificity, regulation of protein function and stability.Our data suggests a multitude of roles for indels that are specialized for domain members of different domain superfamilies. These specialist roles that we observe and trends in the extent of length variation could influence decision making in modeling of new superfamily members. Likewise, the observed limits of length variation, specific for each domain superfamily would be particularly relevant in the choice of alignment length search filters commonly applied in protein sequence analysis.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2659687?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sankaran Sandhya
Saane Sudha Rani
Barah Pankaj
Madabosse Kande Govind
Bernard Offmann
Narayanaswamy Srinivasan
Ramanathan Sowdhamini
spellingShingle Sankaran Sandhya
Saane Sudha Rani
Barah Pankaj
Madabosse Kande Govind
Bernard Offmann
Narayanaswamy Srinivasan
Ramanathan Sowdhamini
Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sankaran Sandhya
Saane Sudha Rani
Barah Pankaj
Madabosse Kande Govind
Bernard Offmann
Narayanaswamy Srinivasan
Ramanathan Sowdhamini
author_sort Sankaran Sandhya
title Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
title_short Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
title_full Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
title_fullStr Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
title_full_unstemmed Length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
title_sort length variations amongst protein domain superfamilies and consequences on structure and function.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Related protein domains of a superfamily can be specified by proteins of diverse lengths. The structural and functional implications of indels in a domain scaffold have been examined.In this study, domain superfamilies with large length variations (more than 30% difference from average domain size, referred as 'length-deviant' superfamilies and 'length-rigid' domain superfamilies (<10% length difference from average domain size) were analyzed for the functional impact of such structural differences. Our delineated dataset, derived from an objective algorithm, enables us to address indel roles in the presence of peculiar structural repeats, functional variation, protein-protein interactions and to examine 'domain contexts' of proteins tolerant to large length variations. Amongst the top-10 length-deviant superfamilies analyzed, we found that 80% of length-deviant superfamilies possess distant internal structural repeats and nearly half of them acquired diverse biological functions. In general, length-deviant superfamilies have higher chance, than length-rigid superfamilies, to be engaged in internal structural repeats. We also found that approximately 40% of length-deviant domains exist as multi-domain proteins involving interactions with domains from the same or other superfamilies. Indels, in diverse domain superfamilies, were found to participate in the accretion of structural and functional features amongst related domains. With specific examples, we discuss how indels are involved directly or indirectly in the generation of oligomerization interfaces, introduction of substrate specificity, regulation of protein function and stability.Our data suggests a multitude of roles for indels that are specialized for domain members of different domain superfamilies. These specialist roles that we observe and trends in the extent of length variation could influence decision making in modeling of new superfamily members. Likewise, the observed limits of length variation, specific for each domain superfamily would be particularly relevant in the choice of alignment length search filters commonly applied in protein sequence analysis.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2659687?pdf=render
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