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Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis

Identification and annotation of functional residues are fundamental questions in protein sequence analysis. Sequence and structure conservation provides valuable information to tackle these questions. It is, however, limited by the incomplete sampling of sequence space in natural evolution. Moreove...

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Autores principales: Du, Yushen, Wu, Nicholas C., Jiang, Lin, Zhang, Tianhao, Gong, Danyang, Shu, Sara, Wu, Ting-Ting, Sun, Ren
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5090041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27803181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01801-16
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author Du, Yushen
Wu, Nicholas C.
Jiang, Lin
Zhang, Tianhao
Gong, Danyang
Shu, Sara
Wu, Ting-Ting
Sun, Ren
author_facet Du, Yushen
Wu, Nicholas C.
Jiang, Lin
Zhang, Tianhao
Gong, Danyang
Shu, Sara
Wu, Ting-Ting
Sun, Ren
author_sort Du, Yushen
collection PubMed
description Identification and annotation of functional residues are fundamental questions in protein sequence analysis. Sequence and structure conservation provides valuable information to tackle these questions. It is, however, limited by the incomplete sampling of sequence space in natural evolution. Moreover, proteins often have multiple functions, with overlapping sequences that present challenges to accurate annotation of the exact functions of individual residues by conservation-based methods. Using the influenza A virus PB1 protein as an example, we developed a method to systematically identify and annotate functional residues. We used saturation mutagenesis and high-throughput sequencing to measure the replication capacity of single nucleotide mutations across the entire PB1 protein. After predicting protein stability upon mutations, we identified functional PB1 residues that are essential for viral replication. To further annotate the functional residues important to the canonical or noncanonical functions of viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (vRdRp), we performed a homologous-structure analysis with 16 different vRdRp structures. We achieved high sensitivity in annotating the known canonical polymerase functional residues. Moreover, we identified a cluster of noncanonical functional residues located in the loop region of the PB1 β-ribbon. We further demonstrated that these residues were important for PB1 protein nuclear import through the interaction with Ran-binding protein 5. In summary, we developed a systematic and sensitive method to identify and annotate functional residues that are not restrained by sequence conservation. Importantly, this method is generally applicable to other proteins about which homologous-structure information is available.
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spelling pubmed-50900412016-11-11 Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis Du, Yushen Wu, Nicholas C. Jiang, Lin Zhang, Tianhao Gong, Danyang Shu, Sara Wu, Ting-Ting Sun, Ren mBio Research Article Identification and annotation of functional residues are fundamental questions in protein sequence analysis. Sequence and structure conservation provides valuable information to tackle these questions. It is, however, limited by the incomplete sampling of sequence space in natural evolution. Moreover, proteins often have multiple functions, with overlapping sequences that present challenges to accurate annotation of the exact functions of individual residues by conservation-based methods. Using the influenza A virus PB1 protein as an example, we developed a method to systematically identify and annotate functional residues. We used saturation mutagenesis and high-throughput sequencing to measure the replication capacity of single nucleotide mutations across the entire PB1 protein. After predicting protein stability upon mutations, we identified functional PB1 residues that are essential for viral replication. To further annotate the functional residues important to the canonical or noncanonical functions of viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (vRdRp), we performed a homologous-structure analysis with 16 different vRdRp structures. We achieved high sensitivity in annotating the known canonical polymerase functional residues. Moreover, we identified a cluster of noncanonical functional residues located in the loop region of the PB1 β-ribbon. We further demonstrated that these residues were important for PB1 protein nuclear import through the interaction with Ran-binding protein 5. In summary, we developed a systematic and sensitive method to identify and annotate functional residues that are not restrained by sequence conservation. Importantly, this method is generally applicable to other proteins about which homologous-structure information is available. American Society for Microbiology 2016-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5090041/ /pubmed/27803181 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01801-16 Text en Copyright © 2016 Du et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Du, Yushen
Wu, Nicholas C.
Jiang, Lin
Zhang, Tianhao
Gong, Danyang
Shu, Sara
Wu, Ting-Ting
Sun, Ren
Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis
title Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis
title_full Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis
title_fullStr Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis
title_short Annotating Protein Functional Residues by Coupling High-Throughput Fitness Profile and Homologous-Structure Analysis
title_sort annotating protein functional residues by coupling high-throughput fitness profile and homologous-structure analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5090041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27803181
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01801-16
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