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Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision

The power of X-ray crystal structure analysis as a technique is to ‘see where the atoms are’. The results are extensively used by a wide variety of research communities. However, this ‘seeing where the atoms are’ can give a false sense of security unless the precision of the placement of the atoms h...

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Autores principales: Gurusaran, Manickam, Shankar, Mani, Nagarajan, Raju, Helliwell, John R., Sekar, Kanagaraj
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4104967/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25075321
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2052252513031485
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author Gurusaran, Manickam
Shankar, Mani
Nagarajan, Raju
Helliwell, John R.
Sekar, Kanagaraj
author_facet Gurusaran, Manickam
Shankar, Mani
Nagarajan, Raju
Helliwell, John R.
Sekar, Kanagaraj
author_sort Gurusaran, Manickam
collection PubMed
description The power of X-ray crystal structure analysis as a technique is to ‘see where the atoms are’. The results are extensively used by a wide variety of research communities. However, this ‘seeing where the atoms are’ can give a false sense of security unless the precision of the placement of the atoms has been taken into account. Indeed, the presentation of bond distances and angles to a false precision (i.e. to too many decimal places) is commonplace. This article has three themes. Firstly, a basis for a proper representation of protein crystal structure results is detailed and demonstrated with respect to analyses of Protein Data Bank entries. The basis for establishing the precision of placement of each atom in a protein crystal structure is non-trivial. Secondly, a knowledge base harnessing such a descriptor of precision is presented. It is applied here to the case of salt bridges, i.e. ion pairs, in protein structures; this is the most fundamental place to start with such structure-precision representations since salt bridges are one of the tenets of protein structure stability. Ion pairs also play a central role in protein oligomerization, molecular recognition of ligands and substrates, allosteric regulation, domain motion and α-helix capping. A new knowledge base, SBPS (Salt Bridges in Protein Structures), takes these structural precisions into account and is the first of its kind. The third theme of the article is to indicate natural extensions of the need for such a description of precision, such as those involving metalloproteins and the determination of the protonation states of ionizable amino acids. Overall, it is also noted that this work and these examples are also relevant to protein three-dimensional structure molecular graphics software.
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spelling pubmed-41049672014-07-24 Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision Gurusaran, Manickam Shankar, Mani Nagarajan, Raju Helliwell, John R. Sekar, Kanagaraj IUCrJ Research Papers The power of X-ray crystal structure analysis as a technique is to ‘see where the atoms are’. The results are extensively used by a wide variety of research communities. However, this ‘seeing where the atoms are’ can give a false sense of security unless the precision of the placement of the atoms has been taken into account. Indeed, the presentation of bond distances and angles to a false precision (i.e. to too many decimal places) is commonplace. This article has three themes. Firstly, a basis for a proper representation of protein crystal structure results is detailed and demonstrated with respect to analyses of Protein Data Bank entries. The basis for establishing the precision of placement of each atom in a protein crystal structure is non-trivial. Secondly, a knowledge base harnessing such a descriptor of precision is presented. It is applied here to the case of salt bridges, i.e. ion pairs, in protein structures; this is the most fundamental place to start with such structure-precision representations since salt bridges are one of the tenets of protein structure stability. Ion pairs also play a central role in protein oligomerization, molecular recognition of ligands and substrates, allosteric regulation, domain motion and α-helix capping. A new knowledge base, SBPS (Salt Bridges in Protein Structures), takes these structural precisions into account and is the first of its kind. The third theme of the article is to indicate natural extensions of the need for such a description of precision, such as those involving metalloproteins and the determination of the protonation states of ionizable amino acids. Overall, it is also noted that this work and these examples are also relevant to protein three-dimensional structure molecular graphics software. International Union of Crystallography 2013-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4104967/ /pubmed/25075321 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2052252513031485 Text en © Gurusaran et al. 2014 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.
spellingShingle Research Papers
Gurusaran, Manickam
Shankar, Mani
Nagarajan, Raju
Helliwell, John R.
Sekar, Kanagaraj
Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
title Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
title_full Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
title_fullStr Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
title_full_unstemmed Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
title_short Do we see what we should see? Describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
title_sort do we see what we should see? describing non-covalent interactions in protein structures including precision
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4104967/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25075321
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2052252513031485
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