III. Geometrical framework for thinking about globular proteins: Turns in proteins

Author:

Škrbić Tatjana12,Giacometti Achille13,Hoang Trinh X.4,Maritan Amos5,Banavar Jayanth R.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Sciences and Nanosystems Ca' Foscari University of Venice Venice Italy

2. Department of Physics and Institute for Fundamental Science University of Oregon Eugene Oregon USA

3. European Centre for Living Technology (ECLT), Ca' Bottacin Venice Italy

4. Institute of Physics, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology Hanoi Vietnam

5. Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Padua Padua Italy

Abstract

AbstractWe have shown recently that the notion of poking pairwise interactions along a chain provides a unifying framework for understanding the formation of both secondary and the tertiary protein structure based on symmetry and geometry. α‐helices and β‐sheets are found to be special geometries that have systematic poking contacts in a repetitive manner with the contacts being local along the α‐helix and non‐local along a pair of adjacent strands within a β‐sheet. Pairwise poking interactions also govern tertiary structure formation, but they are weaker and there are no special geometrical constraints as in secondary structure formation. Here we demonstrate that protein turns, the most prevalent non‐repetitive structural element in proteins, are instances of local (as in α‐helices) and isolated (non‐repetitive) poking pairwise contacts for which the geometrical constraints are partially relaxed. This simple and purely geometrical definition of protein turns (also sometimes known as reverse turns, β‐turns, β‐bends, hairpin bends, 310 bends, kinks, widgets, etc.) provides a simple framework for unifying them. We present the results of a systematic analysis and identify their structural classes as well as their respective amino acid preferences.

Funder

European Commission

University of Oregon

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Structural Biology

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