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Understanding the physical properties that control protein crystallization by analysis of large-scale experimental data.

Authors :
Price II, W Nicholson
Chen, Yang
Handelman, Samuel K
Neely, Helen
Manor, Philip
Karlin, Richard
Nair, Rajesh
Liu, Jinfeng
Baran, Michael
Everett, John
Tong, Saichiu N
Forouhar, Farhad
Swaminathan, Swarup S
Acton, Thomas
Xiao, Rong
Luft, Joseph R
Lauricella, Angela
DeTitta, George T
Rost, Burkhard
Montelione, Gaetano T
Source :
Nature Biotechnology; Jan2009, Vol. 27 Issue 1, p51-57, 7p, 1 Chart, 5 Graphs
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Crystallization is the most serious bottleneck in high-throughput protein-structure determination by diffraction methods. We have used data mining of the large-scale experimental results of the Northeast Structural Genomics Consortium and experimental folding studies to characterize the biophysical properties that control protein crystallization. This analysis leads to the conclusion that crystallization propensity depends primarily on the prevalence of well-ordered surface epitopes capable of mediating interprotein interactions and is not strongly influenced by overall thermodynamic stability. We identify specific sequence features that correlate with crystallization propensity and that can be used to estimate the crystallization probability of a given construct. Analyses of entire predicted proteomes demonstrate substantial differences in the amino acid–sequence properties of human versus eubacterial proteins, which likely reflect differences in biophysical properties, including crystallization propensity. Our thermodynamic measurements do not generally support previous claims regarding correlations between sequence properties and protein stability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10870156
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Biotechnology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35995140
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt.1514