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3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines

Chemokines are small secreted proteins with important roles in immune responses. They consist of a conserved three-dimensional (3D) structure, so-called IL8-like chemokine fold, which is supported by disulfide bridges characteristic of this protein family. Sequence- and profile-based computational m...

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Autores principales: Tomczak, Aurelie, Sontheimer, Jana, Drechsel, David, Hausdorf, Rainer, Gentzel, Marc, Shevchenko, Andrej, Eichler, Stefanie, Fahmy, Karim, Buchholz, Frank, Pisabarro, M. Teresa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3346806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22586462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036151
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author Tomczak, Aurelie
Sontheimer, Jana
Drechsel, David
Hausdorf, Rainer
Gentzel, Marc
Shevchenko, Andrej
Eichler, Stefanie
Fahmy, Karim
Buchholz, Frank
Pisabarro, M. Teresa
author_facet Tomczak, Aurelie
Sontheimer, Jana
Drechsel, David
Hausdorf, Rainer
Gentzel, Marc
Shevchenko, Andrej
Eichler, Stefanie
Fahmy, Karim
Buchholz, Frank
Pisabarro, M. Teresa
author_sort Tomczak, Aurelie
collection PubMed
description Chemokines are small secreted proteins with important roles in immune responses. They consist of a conserved three-dimensional (3D) structure, so-called IL8-like chemokine fold, which is supported by disulfide bridges characteristic of this protein family. Sequence- and profile-based computational methods have been proficient in discovering novel chemokines by making use of their sequence-conserved cysteine patterns. However, it has been recently shown that some chemokines escaped annotation by these methods due to low sequence similarity to known chemokines and to different arrangement of cysteines in sequence and in 3D. Innovative methods overcoming the limitations of current techniques may allow the discovery of new remote homologs in the still functionally uncharacterized fraction of the human genome. We report a novel computational approach for proteome-wide identification of remote homologs of the chemokine family that uses fold recognition techniques in combination with a scaffold-based automatic mapping of disulfide bonds to define a 3D profile of the chemokine protein family. By applying our methodology to all currently uncharacterized human protein sequences, we have discovered two novel proteins that, without having significant sequence similarity to known chemokines or characteristic cysteine patterns, show strong structural resemblance to known anti-HIV chemokines. Detailed computational analysis and experimental structural investigations based on mass spectrometry and circular dichroism support our structural predictions and highlight several other chemokine-like features. The results obtained support their functional annotation as putative novel chemokines and encourage further experimental characterization. The identification of remote homologs of human chemokines may provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms causing pathologies such as cancer or AIDS, and may contribute to the development of novel treatments. Besides, the genome-wide applicability of our methodology based on 3D protein family profiles may open up new possibilities for improving and accelerating protein function annotation processes.
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spelling pubmed-33468062012-05-14 3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines Tomczak, Aurelie Sontheimer, Jana Drechsel, David Hausdorf, Rainer Gentzel, Marc Shevchenko, Andrej Eichler, Stefanie Fahmy, Karim Buchholz, Frank Pisabarro, M. Teresa PLoS One Research Article Chemokines are small secreted proteins with important roles in immune responses. They consist of a conserved three-dimensional (3D) structure, so-called IL8-like chemokine fold, which is supported by disulfide bridges characteristic of this protein family. Sequence- and profile-based computational methods have been proficient in discovering novel chemokines by making use of their sequence-conserved cysteine patterns. However, it has been recently shown that some chemokines escaped annotation by these methods due to low sequence similarity to known chemokines and to different arrangement of cysteines in sequence and in 3D. Innovative methods overcoming the limitations of current techniques may allow the discovery of new remote homologs in the still functionally uncharacterized fraction of the human genome. We report a novel computational approach for proteome-wide identification of remote homologs of the chemokine family that uses fold recognition techniques in combination with a scaffold-based automatic mapping of disulfide bonds to define a 3D profile of the chemokine protein family. By applying our methodology to all currently uncharacterized human protein sequences, we have discovered two novel proteins that, without having significant sequence similarity to known chemokines or characteristic cysteine patterns, show strong structural resemblance to known anti-HIV chemokines. Detailed computational analysis and experimental structural investigations based on mass spectrometry and circular dichroism support our structural predictions and highlight several other chemokine-like features. The results obtained support their functional annotation as putative novel chemokines and encourage further experimental characterization. The identification of remote homologs of human chemokines may provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms causing pathologies such as cancer or AIDS, and may contribute to the development of novel treatments. Besides, the genome-wide applicability of our methodology based on 3D protein family profiles may open up new possibilities for improving and accelerating protein function annotation processes. Public Library of Science 2012-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3346806/ /pubmed/22586462 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036151 Text en Tomczak et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tomczak, Aurelie
Sontheimer, Jana
Drechsel, David
Hausdorf, Rainer
Gentzel, Marc
Shevchenko, Andrej
Eichler, Stefanie
Fahmy, Karim
Buchholz, Frank
Pisabarro, M. Teresa
3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines
title 3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines
title_full 3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines
title_fullStr 3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines
title_full_unstemmed 3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines
title_short 3D Profile-Based Approach to Proteome-Wide Discovery of Novel Human Chemokines
title_sort 3d profile-based approach to proteome-wide discovery of novel human chemokines
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3346806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22586462
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0036151
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