Abstract
Despite sharing many common features, adenine-binding and guanine-binding sites in proteins often show a clear preference for the cognate over the non-cognate ligand. We have analyzed electrostatic potential (ESP) patterns at adenine and guanine-binding sites of a large number of non-redundant proteins where each binding site was first annotated as adenine/guanine-specific or non-specific from a survey of primary literature. We show that more than 90% of ESP variance at the binding sites is accounted for by only two principal component ESP vectors, each aligned to molecular dipoles of adenine and guanine. Projected on these principal component vectors, the adenine/guanine-specific and non-specific binding sites, including adenine-containing dinucleotides, show non-overlapping distributions. Adenine or guanine specificities of the binding sites also show high correlation with the corresponding electrostatic replacement (cognate by non-cognate ligand) energies. High correlation coefficients (0.94 for 35 adenine-binding sites and 1.0 for 20 guanine-binding sites) were obtained when adenine/guanine specificities were predicted using the replacement energies. Our results demonstrate that ligand-free protein ESP is an excellent indicator for discrimination between adenine and guanine-specific binding sites and that ESP of ligand-free protein can be used as a tool to annotate known and putative purine-binding sites in proteins as adenine or guanine-specific.
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