Abstract

To understand the folding mechanism of a protein is one of the goals in bioinformatics study. Nowadays, it is enigmatic and difficult to extract folding information from amino acid sequence using standard bioinformatics techniques or even experimental protocols which can be time consuming. To overcome these problems, we aim to extract the initial folding unit for titin protein (Ig and fnIII domains) by means of inter-residue average distance statistics, Average Distance Map (ADM) and contact frequency analysis (F-value). TI I27 and TNfn3 domains are used to represent the Ig-domain and fnIII-domain, respectively. Beta-strands 2, 3, 5, and 6 are significant for the initial folding processes of TI I27. The central strands of TNfn3 were predicted as a primary folding segment. Known 3D structure and unknown 3D structure domains were investigated by structure or non-structure based multiple sequence alignment, respectively, to learn the conserved hydrophobic residues and predicted compact region relevant to evolution. Our results show good correspondence to experimental data, phi-value and protection factor from H-D exchange experiments. The significance of conserved hydrophobic residues near F-value peaks for structural stability using hydrophobic packing is confirmed. Our prediction methods once again could extract a folding mechanism only knowing the amino acid sequence.

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