Abstract

In a previous paper we obtained ten (orthogonal) factors, linear combinations of which can express the properties of the 20 naturally occurring amino acids. In this paper, we assume that the most important properties (linear combinations of these ten factors) that determine the three-dimensional structure of a protein are conserved properties, i.e., are those that have been conserved during evolution. Two definitions of a conserved property are presented: (1) a conserved property for an average protein is defined as that linear combination of the ten factors that optimally expresses the similarity of one amino acid to another (hence, little change during evolution), as given by the relatedness odds matrix of Dayhoff et al.; (2) a conserved property for each position in the amino acid sequence (locus) of a specific family of homologous proteins (the cytochromec family or the globin family) is defined as that linear combination of the ten factors that is common among a set of amino acids at a given locus when the sequences are properly aligned. When the specificity at each locus is averaged over all loci, the same features are observed for three expressions of these two definitions, namely the conserved property for an average protein, the average conserved property for the cytochromec family, and the average conserved property for the globin family; we find that bulk and hydrophobicity (information about packing and long-range interactions) are more important than other properties, such as the preference for adopting a specific backbone structure (information about short-range interactions). We also demonstrate that the sequence profile of a conserved property, defined for each locus of a protein family (definition 2), corresponds uniquely to the three-dimensional structure, while the conserved property for an average protein (definition 1) is not useful for the prediction of protein structure. The amino acid sequences of numerous proteins are searched to find those that are similar, in terms of the conserved properties (definition 2), to sequences of the same size from one of the homologous families (cytochromec and globin, respectively) for whose loci the conserved properties were defined. Many similar sequences are found, the number of similarities decreasing with increasing size of the segment. However, the segments must be rather long (≥15 residues) before the comparisons become meaningful. As an example, one sufficiently large sequence (20 residues) from a protein of known structure (apo-liver alcohol dehydrogenase that is not a member of either family) is found to be similar in the conserved properties to a particular sequence of a member of the family of human hemoglobin α chains, and the two sequences have similar structures. This means that, since conserved properties are expected to be structure determinants, we can use the conserved properties to predict an initial protein structure for subsequent energy minimization for a protein for which the conserved properties are similar to those of a family of proteins with a sufficiently large number of homologous amino acid sequences; such a large number of homologous sequences is required to define a conserved property for each locus of the homologous protein family.

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