Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.

Acyl-coA binding proteins could transport acyl-coA esters from plastid to endoplasmic reticulum, prior to fatty acid biosynthesis, leading to the formation of triacylglycerol. The structure and the subcellular localization of acyl-coA binding proteins (ACBP) in Brassica napus were computationally pr...

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Main Authors: Nadia Haingotiana Raboanatahiry, Guangyuan Lu, Maoteng Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129650
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spelling doaj-adb2319cfb384f24842a83162195984a2021-03-03T20:02:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01106e012965010.1371/journal.pone.0129650Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.Nadia Haingotiana RaboanatahiryGuangyuan LuMaoteng LiAcyl-coA binding proteins could transport acyl-coA esters from plastid to endoplasmic reticulum, prior to fatty acid biosynthesis, leading to the formation of triacylglycerol. The structure and the subcellular localization of acyl-coA binding proteins (ACBP) in Brassica napus were computationally predicted in this study. Earlier, the structure analysis of ACBPs was limited to the small ACBPs, the current study focused on all four classes of ACBPs. Physicochemical parameters including the size and the length, the intron-exon structure, the isoelectric point, the hydrophobicity, and the amino acid composition were studied. Furthermore, identification of conserved residues and conserved domains were carried out. Secondary structure and tertiary structure of ACBPs were also studied. Finally, subcellular localization of ACBPs was predicted. The findings indicated that the physicochemical parameters and subcellular localizations of ACBPs in Brassica napus were identical to Arabidopsis thaliana. Conserved domain analysis indicated that ACBPs contain two or three kelch domains that belong to different families. Identical residues in acyl-coA binding domains corresponded to eight amino acid residues in all ACBPs of B. napus. However, conserved residues of common ACBPs in all species of animal, plant, bacteria and fungi were only inclusive in small ACBPs. Alpha-helixes were displayed and conserved in all the acyl-coA binding domains, representing almost the half of the protein structure. The findings confirm high similarities in ACBPs between A. thaliana and B. napus, they might share the same functions but loss or gain might be possible.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129650
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadia Haingotiana Raboanatahiry
Guangyuan Lu
Maoteng Li
spellingShingle Nadia Haingotiana Raboanatahiry
Guangyuan Lu
Maoteng Li
Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nadia Haingotiana Raboanatahiry
Guangyuan Lu
Maoteng Li
author_sort Nadia Haingotiana Raboanatahiry
title Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.
title_short Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.
title_full Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.
title_fullStr Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.
title_full_unstemmed Computational Prediction of acyl-coA Binding Proteins Structure in Brassica napus.
title_sort computational prediction of acyl-coa binding proteins structure in brassica napus.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Acyl-coA binding proteins could transport acyl-coA esters from plastid to endoplasmic reticulum, prior to fatty acid biosynthesis, leading to the formation of triacylglycerol. The structure and the subcellular localization of acyl-coA binding proteins (ACBP) in Brassica napus were computationally predicted in this study. Earlier, the structure analysis of ACBPs was limited to the small ACBPs, the current study focused on all four classes of ACBPs. Physicochemical parameters including the size and the length, the intron-exon structure, the isoelectric point, the hydrophobicity, and the amino acid composition were studied. Furthermore, identification of conserved residues and conserved domains were carried out. Secondary structure and tertiary structure of ACBPs were also studied. Finally, subcellular localization of ACBPs was predicted. The findings indicated that the physicochemical parameters and subcellular localizations of ACBPs in Brassica napus were identical to Arabidopsis thaliana. Conserved domain analysis indicated that ACBPs contain two or three kelch domains that belong to different families. Identical residues in acyl-coA binding domains corresponded to eight amino acid residues in all ACBPs of B. napus. However, conserved residues of common ACBPs in all species of animal, plant, bacteria and fungi were only inclusive in small ACBPs. Alpha-helixes were displayed and conserved in all the acyl-coA binding domains, representing almost the half of the protein structure. The findings confirm high similarities in ACBPs between A. thaliana and B. napus, they might share the same functions but loss or gain might be possible.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129650
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