Abstract

Terminal residues of protein chains are charged and more flexible than other residues since they are constrained only on one side. Do they play a particular role in protein-protein and protein-DNA interfaces? To answer this question, we considered large sets of non-redundant protein-protein and protein-DNA complexes and analyzed the status of terminal residues and their involvement in interfaces. In protein-protein complexes, we found that more than half of terminal residues (62%) are either modified by attachment of a tag peptide (10%) or have missing coordinates in the analyzed structures (52%). Terminal residues are almost exclusively located at the surface of proteins (94%). Contrary to charged residues, they are not over or under-represented in protein-protein interfaces, but strongly prefer the peripheral region of interfaces when present at the interface (83% of terminal residues). The almost exclusive location of terminal residues at the surface of the proteins or in the rim regions of interfaces explains that experimental methods relying on tail hybridization can be successfully applied without disrupting the complexes under study. Concerning conformational rearrangement in protein-protein complexes, despite their expected flexibility, terminal residues adopt similar locations between the free and bound forms of the docking benchmark. In protein-DNA complexes, N-terminal residues are twice more frequent than C-terminal residues at interfaces. Both N-terminal and C-terminal residues are under-represented in interfaces, in contrast to positively charged residues, which are strongly favored. When located in protein-DNA interfaces, terminal residues prefer the periphery. N-terminal and C-terminal residues thus have particular properties with regard to interfaces, which cannot be reduced to their charged nature.

Highlights

  • Interactions between proteins or proteins and DNA are a generic process underlying many biological processes

  • Terminal residues of protein chains are charged and more flexible than other residues since they are constrained only on one side. Do they play a particular role in protein-protein and protein-DNA interfaces? To answer this question, we considered large sets of non-redundant protein-protein and protein-DNA complexes and analyzed the status of terminal residues and their involvement in interfaces

  • We took into account the presence and integrity of terminal residues in structures, and computed their frequency at protein-protein interfaces and specific regions of interfaces, in a large dataset of 17,658 binary complexes, non-redundant at the interface level, termed DIMER70, and a filtered dataset of 5,203 proteins, non-redundant at the monomer level, termed MONOMER25

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Summary

Introduction

Interactions between proteins or proteins and DNA are a generic process underlying many biological processes. Thanks to the growing number of complexes available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB [1]), generic principles of protein-protein interactions have been discovered [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Protein-protein binding sites are relatively large and flat; their organization shows as a core of hydrophobic residues surrounded by a rim of polar residues that occlude the solvent. Only a small set of residues contribute most to the free energy of binding. Hetero- and PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0162143 September 9, 2016

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