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Interacting amino acid preferences of 3D pattern pairs at the binding sites of transient and obligate protein complexes

conference contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by S Lukaman, K Sim, J Li, Yi-Ping Phoebe Chen
To assess the physico-chemical characteristics of protein-protein interactions, protein sequences and overall structural folds have been analyzed previously. To highlight this, discovery and examination of amino acid patterns at the binding sites defined by structural proximity in 3-dimensional (3D) space are essential. In this paper, we investigate the interacting preferences of 3D pattern pairs discovered separately in transient and obligate protein complexes. These 3D pattern pairs are not necessarily sequence-consecutive, but each residue in two groups of amino acids from two proteins in a complex is within certain °A threshold to most residues in the other group. We develop an algorithm called AA-pairs by which every pair of interacting proteins is represented as a bipartite graph, and it discovers all maximal quasi-bicliques from every bipartite graph to form our 3D pattern pairs. From 112 and 2533 highly conserved 3D pattern pairs discovered in the transient and obligate complexes respectively, we observe that Ala and Leu is the highest occuring amino acid in interacting 3D patterns of transient (20.91%) and obligate (33.82%) complexes respectively. From the study on the dipeptide composition on each side of interacting 3D pattern pairs, dipeptides Ala-Ala and Ala-Leu are popular in 3D patterns of both transient and obligate complexes. The interactions between amino acids with large hydrophobicity difference are present more in the transient than in the obligate complexes. On contrary, in obligate complexes, interactions between hydrophobic residues account for the top 5 most occuring amino acid pairings.

History

Event

Asia-Pacific Bioinformatics Conference (6th : 2008 : Kyoto, Japan)

Pagination

69 - 78

Publisher

Imperial College Press

Location

Kyoto, Japan

Place of publication

London, England

Start date

2008-01-14

End date

2008-01-17

ISBN-13

9781848161085

ISBN-10

1848161085

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication

Editor/Contributor(s)

A Brazma, S Miyano, T Akutsu

Title of proceedings

APBC 2008 : Proceedings of the Sixth Asia-Pacific Bioinformatics Conference.

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