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Consistency matrices: quantified structure alignments for sets of related proteins
Publication Type:
Journal ArticleSource:
Volume 51, Issue 1, p.1 - 9 (2003)URL:
PM:12596259Keywords:
Algorithms; Databases; Protein; Protein Folding; Protein Structure; Tertiary; Proteins; chemistry; classification; Sequence Alignment; methods; Sequence Analysis; ProteinAbstract:
Comparing two remotely similar structures is a difficult problem: more often than not, resulting structure alignments will show ambiguities and a unique answer usually does not even exist. In addition, alignments in general have a limited information content because every aligned residue is considered equally important. To solve these issues to a certain extent, one can take the perspective of a whole group of similar structures and then evaluate common structural features. Here, we describe a consistency approach that, although not actually performing a multiple structure alignment, does produce the information that one would conceivably want from such an experiment: the key structural features of the group, e.g., a fold, which in this case are projected onto either a pair of proteins or a single protein. Both representations are useful for a number of applications, ranging from the detection of (partially) wrong structure alignments to protein structure classification and fold recognition. To demonstrate some of these applications, the procedure was applied to 195 SCOP folds containing a total of 1802 domains sharing very low sequence similarity
Notes:
DA - 20030221
IS - 1097-0134 (Electronic)
LA - eng
PT - Evaluation Studies
PT - Journal Article
PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
RN - 0 (Proteins)
SB - IM