Evolutionarily conserved networks of residues mediate allosteric communication in proteins

GM Süel, SW Lockless, MA Wall… - Nature structural …, 2003 - nature.com
Nature structural biology, 2003nature.com
A fundamental goal in cellular signaling is to understand allosteric communication, the
process by which signals originating at one site in a protein propagate reliably to affect
distant functional sites. The general principles of protein structure that underlie this process
remain unknown. Here, we describe a sequence-based statistical method for quantitatively
mapping the global network of amino acid interactions in a protein. Application of this
method for three structurally and functionally distinct protein families (G protein–coupled …
Abstract
A fundamental goal in cellular signaling is to understand allosteric communication, the process by which signals originating at one site in a protein propagate reliably to affect distant functional sites. The general principles of protein structure that underlie this process remain unknown. Here, we describe a sequence-based statistical method for quantitatively mapping the global network of amino acid interactions in a protein. Application of this method for three structurally and functionally distinct protein families (G protein–coupled receptors, the chymotrypsin class of serine proteases and hemoglobins) reveals a surprisingly simple architecture for amino acid interactions in each protein family: a small subset of residues forms physically connected networks that link distant functional sites in the tertiary structure. Although small in number, residues comprising the network show excellent correlation with the large body of mechanistic data available for each family. The data suggest that evolutionarily conserved sparse networks of amino acid interactions represent structural motifs for allosteric communication in proteins.
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