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Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces

Hetero dimer (different monomers) interfaces are involved in catalysis and regulation through the formation of interface active sites. This is critical in cell and molecular biology events. The physical and chemical factors determining the formation of the interface active sites is often large in nu...

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Autores principales: Vaishnavi, Ayyappan, Sowmya, Gopichandran, Kalaivanii, Jayaseelan, Ilakya, Selvarajan, Kangueane, Uma, Kangueane, Pandjassarame
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2957768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20978604
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author Vaishnavi, Ayyappan
Sowmya, Gopichandran
Kalaivanii, Jayaseelan
Ilakya, Selvarajan
Kangueane, Uma
Kangueane, Pandjassarame
author_facet Vaishnavi, Ayyappan
Sowmya, Gopichandran
Kalaivanii, Jayaseelan
Ilakya, Selvarajan
Kangueane, Uma
Kangueane, Pandjassarame
author_sort Vaishnavi, Ayyappan
collection PubMed
description Hetero dimer (different monomers) interfaces are involved in catalysis and regulation through the formation of interface active sites. This is critical in cell and molecular biology events. The physical and chemical factors determining the formation of the interface active sites is often large in numbers. The combined role of interacting features is frequently combinatorial and additive in nature. Therefore, it is important to determine the physical and chemical features of such interactions. A number of such features have been documented in literature since 1975. However, the use of such interaction features in the prediction of interaction partners and sites given their sequences is still a challenge. In a non-redundant dataset of 156 hetero-dimer structures determined by X-ray crystallography, the interacting partners are often varying in size and thus, size variation between subunits is an important factor in determining the mode of interface formation. The size of protein subunits interacting are either small-small, largelarge, medium-medium, large-small, large-medium and small-medium. It should also be noted that the interface formed between subunits have physical interactions at N terminal (N), C terminal (C) and middle (M) region of the protein with reference to their sequences in one dimension. These features are believed to have application in the prediction of interaction partners and sites from sequences. However, the use of such features for interaction prediction from sequence is not currently clear.
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spelling pubmed-29577682010-10-26 Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces Vaishnavi, Ayyappan Sowmya, Gopichandran Kalaivanii, Jayaseelan Ilakya, Selvarajan Kangueane, Uma Kangueane, Pandjassarame Bioinformation Hypothesis Hetero dimer (different monomers) interfaces are involved in catalysis and regulation through the formation of interface active sites. This is critical in cell and molecular biology events. The physical and chemical factors determining the formation of the interface active sites is often large in numbers. The combined role of interacting features is frequently combinatorial and additive in nature. Therefore, it is important to determine the physical and chemical features of such interactions. A number of such features have been documented in literature since 1975. However, the use of such interaction features in the prediction of interaction partners and sites given their sequences is still a challenge. In a non-redundant dataset of 156 hetero-dimer structures determined by X-ray crystallography, the interacting partners are often varying in size and thus, size variation between subunits is an important factor in determining the mode of interface formation. The size of protein subunits interacting are either small-small, largelarge, medium-medium, large-small, large-medium and small-medium. It should also be noted that the interface formed between subunits have physical interactions at N terminal (N), C terminal (C) and middle (M) region of the protein with reference to their sequences in one dimension. These features are believed to have application in the prediction of interaction partners and sites from sequences. However, the use of such features for interaction prediction from sequence is not currently clear. Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group 2010-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2957768/ /pubmed/20978604 Text en © 2010 Biomedical Informatics Publishing Group This is an open-access article, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Vaishnavi, Ayyappan
Sowmya, Gopichandran
Kalaivanii, Jayaseelan
Ilakya, Selvarajan
Kangueane, Uma
Kangueane, Pandjassarame
Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
title Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
title_full Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
title_fullStr Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
title_full_unstemmed Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
title_short Interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
title_sort interaction modes at protein hetero-dimer interfaces
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2957768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20978604
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