Abstract

A wide range of de novo design of αβ-proteins has been achieved based on the design rules, which describe secondary structure lengths and loop torsion patterns favorable for design target topologies. This paper proposes design rules for register shifts in βαβ-motifs, which have not been reported previously, but are necessary for determining a target structure of de novo design of αβ-proteins. By analyzing naturally occurring protein structures in a database, we found preferences for register shifts in βαβ-motifs, and derived the following empirical rules: (1) register shifts must not be negative regardless of torsion types for a constituent loop in βαβ-motifs; (2) preferred register shifts strongly depend on the loop torsion types. To explain these empirical rules by physical interactions, we conducted physics-based simulations for systems mimicking a βαβ-motif that contains the most frequently observed loop type in the database. We performed an exhaustive conformational sampling of the loop region, imposing the exclusion volume and hydrogen bond satisfaction condition. The distributions of register shifts obtained from the simulations agreed well with those of the database analysis, indicating that the empirical rules are a consequence of physical interactions, rather than an evolutionary sampling bias. Our proposed design rules will serve as a guide to making appropriate target structures for the de novo design of αβ-proteins.

Highlights

  • De novo protein design allows us to explore the whole protein sequence space in principle and create proteins with brand new structures and functions, independently from any naturally existing proteins [1]

  • One of the procedures used for de novo design of proteins with β-sheets consists of the following three steps: (1) Determinig a blueprint of the target structure, a two-dimensional map specifying the number and lengths of secondary structures and loop torsion angle bins represented by the ABEGO classification [15], etc

  • These observations suggest that the statistical distributions of the register shifts obtained by the database analysis shown in Fig 3 are a consequence of physical interactions, rather than an evolutionary sampling bias

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Summary

Introduction

De novo protein design allows us to explore the whole protein sequence space in principle and create proteins with brand new structures and functions, independently from any naturally existing proteins [1]. If S1 is at the edge of the β-sheet, structures with a register shift of RN1À 2 1⁄4 þ1 or RC1À 2 1⁄4 À 1, as shown in S2A Fig, are not possible in principle because there is no hydrogen bonding partner for the residues at the terminal of S1 and, they cannot exist as a β-strand residue.

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