Abstract

BackgroundInteractions that involve one or more amino acid side chains near the ends of protein helices stabilize helix termini and shape the geometry of the adjacent loops, making a substantial contribution to overall protein structure. Previous work has identified key helix-terminal motifs, such as Asx/ST N-caps, the capping box, and hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions, but important questions remain, including: 1) What loop backbone geometries are favoured by each motif? 2) To what extent are multi-amino acid motifs likely to represent genuine cooperative interactions? 3) Can new motifs be identified in a large, recent dataset using the latest bioinformatics tools?ResultsThree analytical tools are applied here to answer these questions. First, helix-terminal structures are partitioned by loop backbone geometry using a new 3D clustering algorithm. Next, Cascade Detection, a motif detection algorithm recently published by the author, is applied to each cluster to determine which sequence motifs are overrepresented in each geometry. Finally, the results for each motif are presented in a CapMap, a 3D conformational heatmap that displays the distribution of the motif’s overrepresentation across loop geometries, enabling the rapid isolation and characterization of the associated side chain interaction. This work identifies a library of geometry-specific side chain interactions that provides a new, detailed picture of loop structure near the helix terminus. Highlights include determinations of the favoured loop geometries for the Asx/ST N-cap motifs, capping boxes, “big” boxes, and other hydrophobic, electrostatic, H-bond, and pi stacking interactions, many of which have not been described before.ConclusionsThis work demonstrates that the combination of structural clustering and motif detection in the sequence space can efficiently identify side chain motifs and map them to the loop geometries which they support. Protein designers should find this study useful, because it identifies side chain interactions which are good candidates for inclusion in synthetic helix-terminal loops with specific desired geometries, since they are used in nature to support these geometries. The techniques described here can also be applied to map side chain interactions associated with other structural components of proteins such as beta and gamma turns.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12859-015-0671-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Interactions that involve one or more amino acid side chains near the ends of protein helices stabilize helix termini and shape the geometry of the adjacent loops, making a substantial contribution to overall protein structure

  • This combined procedure was applied because examination of extracted examples of the common Asx and ST N-cap motifs revealed that the method produced alignments between sequence and helical structure that were superior to those produced by DSSP secondary structure assignments or PDB annotations alone, as judged by both backbone geometry and the hydrogenbonding patterns of the motifs

  • Low resolution 3 residue/16 cluster (3R/16C) or high resolution 4 residue/32 cluster (4R/32C) maps are shown for each motif, depending on which gives the clearest structural picture

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Summary

Introduction

Interactions that involve one or more amino acid side chains near the ends of protein helices stabilize helix termini and shape the geometry of the adjacent loops, making a substantial contribution to overall protein structure. At the helical C-terminus, the backbone carbonyls of the helix are often satisfied by hydrogen bonds from main chain amide groups in the loop ahead, forming the Schellman and αL motifs [4,5,6,7], while at the N-terminus the unsatisfied backbone groups commonly form hydrogen bonds with side chains in the loop behind, as in the Asx/ST N-caps [8, 9], the capping box [10,11,12,13,14,15,16], and the big box [15] At both ends of the helix, hydrophobic side chain interactions are frequently found [17,18,19,20,21,22,23]. The importance of capping interactions to structure has been highlighted by the demonstration that the mutation of a single capping residue can cause misfolding leading to serious illness [46]

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