Reaction Trajectory Revealed by a Joint Analysis of Protein Data Bank
Description
Structural motions along a reaction pathway hold the secret about how a biological macromolecule functions. If each static structure were considered as a snapshot of the protein molecule in action, a large collection of structures would constitute a multidimensional conformational space of an enormous size. Here I present a joint analysis of hundreds of known structures of human hemoglobin in the Protein Data Bank. By applying singular value decomposition to distance matrices of these structures, I demonstrate that this large collection of structural snapshots, derived under a wide range of experimental conditions, arrange orderly along a reaction pathway. The structural motions along this extensive trajectory, including several helical transformations, arrive at a reverse engineered mechanism of the cooperative machinery (Ren, companion article), and shed light on pathological properties of the abnormal homotetrameric hemoglobins from α-thalassemia. This method of meta-analysis provides a general approach to structural dynamics based on static protein structures in this post genomics era.
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1371/journal.pone.0077141
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:10493
Funding
- National Institutes of Health, National Center for Research Resources
- RR007707
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences
- 8P41GM103543