4.3 Article

Protein flexibility and rigidity predicted from sequence

Journal

PROTEINS-STRUCTURE FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 61, Issue 1, Pages 115-126

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/prot.20587

Keywords

flexibility prediction; protein dynamics; protein motion; protein structure prediction; solvent accessibility; multiple alignments; secondary structure prediction; protein function prediction; enzyme active sites; conformational switch

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01-GM63029-01] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NLM NIH HHS [R01-LM07329-01] Funding Source: Medline

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Structural flexibility has been associated with various biological processes such as molecular recognition and catalytic activity. In silico studies of protein flexibility have attempted to characterize and predict flexible regions based on simple principles. B-values derived from experimental data are widely used to measure residue flexibility. Here, we present the most comprehensive large-scale analysis of B-values. We used this analysis to develop a neural network-based method that predicts flexible-rigid residues from amino acid sequence. The system uses both global and local information (i.e., features from the entire protein such as secondary structure composition, protein length, and fraction of surface residues, and features from a local window of sequence-consecutive residues). The most important local feature was the evolutionary exchange profile reflecting sequence conservation in a family of related proteins. To illustrate its potential, we applied our method to 4 different case studies, each of which related our predictions to aspects of function. The first 2 were the prediction of regions that undergo conformational switches upon environmental changes (switch 11 region in Ras) and the prediction of surface regions, the rigidity of which is crucial for their function (tunnel in propeller folds). Both were correctly captured by our method. The third study established that residues in active sites of enzymes are predicted by our method to have unexpectedly low B-values. The final study demonstrated how well our predictions correlated with NMR order parameters to reflect motion. Our method had not been set up to address any of the tasks in those 4 case studies. Therefore, we expect that this method will assist in many attempts at inferring aspects of function.

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