Issue 38, 2011

Why not consider a spherical protein? Implications of backbone hydrogen bonding for protein structure and function

Abstract

The intrinsic ability of protein structures to exhibit the geometric features required for molecular function in the absence of evolution is examined in the context of three systems: the reference set of real, single domain protein structures, a library of computationally generated, compact homopolypeptides, artificial structures with protein-like secondary structural elements, and quasi-spherical random proteins packed at the same density as proteins but lacking backbone secondary structure and hydrogen bonding. Without any evolutionary selection, the library of artificial structures has similar backbone hydrogen bonding, global shape, surface to volume ratio and statistically significant structural matches to real protein global structures. Moreover, these artificial structures have native like ligand binding cavities, and a tiny subset has interfacial geometries consistent with native-like protein–protein interactions and DNA binding. In contrast, the quasi-spherical random proteins, being devoid of secondary structure, have a lower surface to volume ratio and lack ligand binding pockets and intermolecular interaction interfaces. Surprisingly, these quasi-spherical random proteins exhibit protein like distributions of virtual bond angles and almost all have a statistically significant structural match to real protein structures. This implies that it is local chain stiffness, even without backbone hydrogen bonding, and compactness that give rise to the likely completeness of the library solved single domain protein structures. These studies also suggest that the packing of secondary structural elements generates the requisite geometry for intermolecular binding. Thus, backbone hydrogen bonding plays an important role not only in protein structure but also in protein function. Such ability to bind biological molecules is an inherent feature of protein structure; if combined with appropriate protein sequences, it could provide the non-zero background probability for low-level function that evolution requires for selection to occur.

Graphical abstract: Why not consider a spherical protein? Implications of backbone hydrogen bonding for protein structure and function

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Apr 2011
Accepted
20 May 2011
First published
08 Jun 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 17044-17055

Why not consider a spherical protein? Implications of backbone hydrogen bonding for protein structure and function

M. Brylinski, M. Gao and J. Skolnick, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 17044 DOI: 10.1039/C1CP21140D

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