Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space

Investigating correlations is the key to understanding the nature of biological systems. In general, correlations describe the relationship between data sets or specific characteristics of data. To investigate correlations among and within biomolecules we discussed two complementary approaches to ad...

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Main Author: Hoffgaard, Franziska
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2011
Online Access:http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/2743/1/Dissertation_Hoffgaard.pdf
Hoffgaard, Franziska <http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/view/person/Hoffgaard=3AFranziska=3A=3A.html> : Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space. Technische Universität, Darmstadt [Ph.D. Thesis], (2011)
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spelling ndltd-tu-darmstadt.de-oai-tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de-27432017-03-17T06:35:25Z http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/2743/ Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space Hoffgaard, Franziska Investigating correlations is the key to understanding the nature of biological systems. In general, correlations describe the relationship between data sets or specific characteristics of data. To investigate correlations among and within biomolecules we discussed two complementary approaches to advance the understanding of evolution. Mutational dynamics can mainly be seen in the space of sequences whereas the altered phenotype is selected in the biophysical realm. By mutual information, an information-theoretical measure, we can identify potentially coevolving nucleotide or amino acid positions from a set of sequences combined into a multiple sequence alignment. In the biophysical realm, the mechanics of a biomolecule, which is important for its structure and function, is examined by various methods. Since molecular dynamics simulations and normal mode analysis are computationally expensive approaches, coarse-grained protein representations such as elastic network models have been developed. We used such protein models, particularly the Gaussian and the anisotropic network model, to jugde the importance of single residues or amino acid contacts on the dynamics of the biomolecule or distinct portions. In this thesis, we applied this analysis to distinct sets of hammerhead ribozyme sequences of type I and III to reveal coevolutionary hot spots shared among the different sequences. We observed a weaker coevolution of ribozymes originating from prokaryotes and eukaryotes compared to viroid sequences. Additionally, we obtained signals between helical stems I and II which is well-known from experiments. However, we noticed a coevolutionary connection between stems I and III throughout all sets of sequences that have not been reported yet. We applied an established protocol to a structural model of the small viral potassium channel Kcv, where we deleted single contacts and measured the resulting change in dynamics using the Frobenius norm. Here, we observed a mechanical connection of N- and C-terminal residues, whereas the selectivity filter seems almost mechanically uncoupled to the rest of the channel. A similar study was performed for the acetylcholinesterase as well where we additionally correlated mechanical changes with coevolutionary information. By means of coarse-grained protein models, we proposed a protocol for the Kcv to identify the transition from a functional to a non-functional channel upon N-terminal deletions. Furthermore, we utilized reduced molecular models to derive amino acid specific interaction constants directly from a set of protein structures obtained from e.g. from molecular dynamics simulations. To this end, we examined the performance of three approaches to retrieve the input parameters from an artificially constructed system. As it turned out, semidefinite programming is an efficient method for this task and was employed for a realistic application as well. 2011-09-05 Ph.D. Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf eng only the rights of use according to UrhG http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/2743/1/Dissertation_Hoffgaard.pdf Hoffgaard, Franziska <http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/view/person/Hoffgaard=3AFranziska=3A=3A.html> : Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space. Technische Universität, Darmstadt [Ph.D. Thesis], (2011) en info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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language English
en
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sources NDLTD
description Investigating correlations is the key to understanding the nature of biological systems. In general, correlations describe the relationship between data sets or specific characteristics of data. To investigate correlations among and within biomolecules we discussed two complementary approaches to advance the understanding of evolution. Mutational dynamics can mainly be seen in the space of sequences whereas the altered phenotype is selected in the biophysical realm. By mutual information, an information-theoretical measure, we can identify potentially coevolving nucleotide or amino acid positions from a set of sequences combined into a multiple sequence alignment. In the biophysical realm, the mechanics of a biomolecule, which is important for its structure and function, is examined by various methods. Since molecular dynamics simulations and normal mode analysis are computationally expensive approaches, coarse-grained protein representations such as elastic network models have been developed. We used such protein models, particularly the Gaussian and the anisotropic network model, to jugde the importance of single residues or amino acid contacts on the dynamics of the biomolecule or distinct portions. In this thesis, we applied this analysis to distinct sets of hammerhead ribozyme sequences of type I and III to reveal coevolutionary hot spots shared among the different sequences. We observed a weaker coevolution of ribozymes originating from prokaryotes and eukaryotes compared to viroid sequences. Additionally, we obtained signals between helical stems I and II which is well-known from experiments. However, we noticed a coevolutionary connection between stems I and III throughout all sets of sequences that have not been reported yet. We applied an established protocol to a structural model of the small viral potassium channel Kcv, where we deleted single contacts and measured the resulting change in dynamics using the Frobenius norm. Here, we observed a mechanical connection of N- and C-terminal residues, whereas the selectivity filter seems almost mechanically uncoupled to the rest of the channel. A similar study was performed for the acetylcholinesterase as well where we additionally correlated mechanical changes with coevolutionary information. By means of coarse-grained protein models, we proposed a protocol for the Kcv to identify the transition from a functional to a non-functional channel upon N-terminal deletions. Furthermore, we utilized reduced molecular models to derive amino acid specific interaction constants directly from a set of protein structures obtained from e.g. from molecular dynamics simulations. To this end, we examined the performance of three approaches to retrieve the input parameters from an artificially constructed system. As it turned out, semidefinite programming is an efficient method for this task and was employed for a realistic application as well.
author Hoffgaard, Franziska
spellingShingle Hoffgaard, Franziska
Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space
author_facet Hoffgaard, Franziska
author_sort Hoffgaard, Franziska
title Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space
title_short Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space
title_full Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space
title_fullStr Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space
title_full_unstemmed Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space
title_sort biomolecular correlation in physical and sequence space
publishDate 2011
url http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/2743/1/Dissertation_Hoffgaard.pdf
Hoffgaard, Franziska <http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/view/person/Hoffgaard=3AFranziska=3A=3A.html> : Biomolecular Correlation in Physical and Sequence Space. Technische Universität, Darmstadt [Ph.D. Thesis], (2011)
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