Abstract

ABSTRACTMetalloproteins bind and utilize metal ions for a variety of biological purposes. Due to the ubiquity of metalloprotein involvement throughout these processes across all domains of life, how proteins coordinate metal ions for different biochemical functions is of great relevance to understanding the implementation of these biological processes. Toward these ends, we have improved our methodology for structurally and functionally characterizing metal binding sites in metalloproteins. Our new ligand detection method is statistically much more robust, producing estimated false positive and false negative rates of ∼0.11% and ∼1.2%, respectively. Additional improvements expand both the range of metal ions and their coordination number that can be effectively analyzed. Also, the inclusion of additional quality control filters has significantly improved structure‐function Spearman correlations as demonstrated by rho values greater than 0.90 for several metal coordination analyses and even one rho value above 0.95. Also, improvements in bond‐length distributions have revealed bond‐length modes specific to chemical functional groups involved in multidentation. Using these improved methods, we analyzed all single metal ion binding sites with Zn, Mg, Ca, Fe, and Na ions in the wwPDB, producing statistically rigorous results supporting the existence of both a significant number of unexpected compressed angles and subsequent aberrant metal ion coordination geometries (CGs) within structurally known metalloproteins. By recognizing these aberrant CGs in our clustering analyses, high correlations are achieved between structural and functional descriptions of metal ion coordination. Moreover, distinct biochemical functions are associated with aberrant CGs versus nonaberrant CGs. Proteins 2017; 85:885–907. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Highlights

  • Metalloproteins are proteins that can bind at least one metal ion as a cofactor

  • We demonstrated that a large number of aberrant 4-ligand coordination geometries (CGs) in zinc metalloproteins with significant deviations from canonical CGs existed due to structural constraints from the metalloprotein

  • The dilemma of choosing the cutoff is, if it is too generous, extra secondcoordination-shell atoms will be included, which will increase the demand for a more accurate CG fitting method. If it is too strict, some of the loosely bound ligands will be excluded in the first step, which will hinder the fitting to the correct CG model

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Summary

Introduction

Metalloproteins are proteins that can bind at least one metal ion as a cofactor. They play various distinct functional, structural, and signal transductional roles in proteins, and are essential for all domains of life. One of the most important aspects of metal binding is its coordination geometry (CG), which often implies functional activities. A metal ion can bind to its ligands almost ideally. In this context, metal ions are observed and verified to VC 2017 THE AUTHORS PROTEINS: STRUCTURE, FUNCTION, AND BIOINFORMATICS PUBLISHED BY WILEY PERIODICALS, INC

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