(CHAPTER 15- Brooker Text) October 23 & 25, 2007 Bio 184 Dr. Tom Peavy
Biology 224 Instructor: Tom Peavy Feb 21 & 26, 2008
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Transcript of Biology 224 Instructor: Tom Peavy Feb 21 & 26, 2008
Biology 224Instructor: Tom Peavy
Feb 21 & 26, 2008
<Images from Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics by Jonathan Pevsner>
Protein Structure &Analysis
protein
Protein families
Protein function
Physical properties
Protein localization
Gene ontology (GO):--cellular component--biological process--molecular function
Protein domains, motifs& signatures
Definitions
Signature: • a protein category such as a domain or motif
Domain: • a region of a protein that can adopt a 3D structure• a fold• a family is a group of proteins that share a domain• examples: zinc finger domain immunoglobulin domain
Motif (or fingerprint):• a short, conserved region of a protein• typically 10 to 20 contiguous amino acid residues
Definition of a domain
According to InterPro at EBI (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/):
A domain is an independent structural unit, found aloneor in conjunction with other domains or repeats.Domains are evolutionarily related.
According to SMART (http://smart.embl-heidelberg.de):
A domain is a conserved structural entity with distinctivesecondary structure content and a hydrophobic core.Homologous domains with common functions usuallyshow sequence similarities.
15 most common domains (human)
Zn finger, C2H2 type 1093 proteinsImmunoglobulin 1032EGF-like 471Zn-finger, RING 458Homeobox 417Pleckstrin-like 405RNA-binding region RNP-1 400SH3 394Calcium-binding EF-hand 392Fibronectin, type III 300PDZ/DHR/GLGF 280Small GTP-binding protein 261BTB/POZ 236bHLH 226Cadherin 226
Varieties of protein domains
Extending along the length of a protein
Occupying a subset of a protein sequence
Occurring one or more times
Example of a protein with domains: Methyl CpG binding protein 2 (MeCP2)
MBD TRD
The protein includes a methylated DNA binding domain(MBD) and a transcriptional repression domain (TRD).MeCP2 is a transcriptional repressor.
Mutations in the gene encoding MeCP2 cause RettSyndrome, a neurological disorder affecting girlsprimarily.
Result of an MeCP2 blastp search:A methyl-binding domain shared by several proteins
Are proteins that share only a domain homologous?
Proteins can have both domains and patterns (motifs)
Domain(aspartylprotease)
Domain(reversetranscriptase)
Pattern(severalresidues)
Pattern(severalresidues)
SwissProt entry for HIV-1 pol links to many databases
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Databases/
ExPASy Proteomics ServerThe ExPASy (Expert Protein Analysis System) proteomics server of the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB) is dedicated to the analysis of protein sequences and structures as well as 2-D PAGE (Disclaimer / References).
http://ca.expasy.org/
InterPro is a database of protein families, domains and functional sites in which identifiable features found in known proteins can be applied to unknown protein sequences.
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/
InterPro
PROSITEDatabase of protein families and domainshttp://ca.expasy.org/prosite/
Pfam is a large collection of multiple sequence alignments and hidden Markov models covering many common protein domains. http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Software/Pfam/index.shtml
PRINTS is a compendium of protein fingerprints http://umber.sbs.man.ac.uk/dbbrowser/PRINTS/
The ProDom protein domain database consists of an automatic compilation of homologous domains.http://prodes.toulouse.inra.fr/prodom/current/html/home.php
SMART (a Simple Modular Architecture Research Tool) allows the identification and annotation of genetically mobile domains and the analysis of domain architectures.
http://smart.embl-heidelberg.de/
The ProDom protein domain database consists of an automatic compilation of homologous domains.http://prodes.toulouse.inra.fr/prodom/current/html/home.php
Houses the PIRSF, ProClassand ProLINK databaseshttp://pir.georgetown.edu/
Protein family classification and databases
PIRSF TIGRFAMs
SUPERFAMILY Gene3D
PANTHER
http://pir.georgetown.edu/iproclass/http://www.tigr.org/TIGRFAMs/index.shtml
http://supfam.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/SUPERFAMILY/ http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/cath/Gene3D/
http://www.pantherdb.org/
Definition of a motif
A motif (or fingerprint) is a short, conserved region of a protein. Its size is often 10 to 20 amino acids.
Simple motifs include transmembrane domains andphosphorylation sites. These do not imply homologywhen found in a group of proteins.
In PROSITE,a pattern is a qualitative motif description(a protein either matches a pattern, or not).
Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium
The Gene Ontology Consortium
An ontology is a description of concepts. The GOConsortium compiles a dynamic, controlled vocabularyof terms related to gene products.
There are three organizing principles: Molecular functionBiological processCellular component
Gene product cytochrome c GO entry terms:
molecular function = electron transporter activity,
the biological process = oxidative phosphorylation and induction of cell death
the cellular component = mitochondrial matrix and mitochondrial inner membrane.
Example
GO consortium (http://www.geneontology.org)No centralized GO database. Instead, curatorsof organism-specific databases assign GO termsto gene products for each organism.
AmiGO is the searchable portion of the GO--Gene Symbol, name, UniProt access numbers, and Text searches can be used to find GO entries
The Gene Ontology Consortium: Evidence Codes
IC Inferred by curatorIDA Inferred from direct assayIEA Inferred from electronic annotationIEP Inferred from expression patternIGI Inferred from genetic interactionIMP Inferred from mutant phenotypeIPI Inferred from physical interactionISS Inferred from sequence or structural similarityNAS Non-traceable author statementND No biological dataTAS Traceable author statement