Computational Analysis of Non-covalent Interactions in Phycocyanin Subunit Interfaces
Abstract
Protein-protein interactions are an important phenomenon in biological processes and functions. We used the manually curated non-redundant dataset of 118 phycocyanin interfaces to gain additional insight into this phenomenon using a robust inter-atomic non-covalent interaction analyzing tool PPCheck. Our observations indicate that there is a relatively high composition of hydrophobic residues at the interfaces. Most of the interface residues are clustered at the middle of the range which we call “standard-size” interfaces. Furthermore, the multiple interaction patterns founded in the present study indicate that more than half of the residues involved in these interactions participate in multiple and water-bridged hydrogen bonds. Thus, hydrogen bonds contribute maximally towards the stability of protein-protein complexes. The analysis shows that hydrogen bond energies contribute to about 88 % to the total energy and it also increases with interface size. Van der Waals (vdW) energy contr...ibutes to 9.3 %±1.7 % on average in these complexes. Moreover, there is about 1.9 %±1.5 % contribution by electrostatic energy. Nevertheless, the role by vdW and electrostatic energy could not be ignored in interface binding. Results show that the total binding energy is more for large phycocyanin interfaces. The normalized energy per residue was less than −16 kJ mol−1, while most of them have energy in the range from −6 to −14 kJ mol−1. The non-covalent interacting residues in these proteins were found to be highly conserved. Obtained results might contribute to the understanding of structural stability of this class of evolutionary essential proteins with increased practical application and future designs of novel protein-bioactive compound interactions.
Keywords:
Hydrogen bonds / Hydrophobic interactions / Interface / Phycocyanins / Salt bridgesSource:
Molecular Informatics, 2019, 38, 11-12, 1800145-Publisher:
- Willey
Funding / projects:
- The study of physicochemical and biochemical processes in living environment that have impacts on pollution and the investigation of possibilities for minimizing the consequences (RS-172001)
- Rational design and synthesis of biologically active and coordination compounds and functional materials, relevant for (bio)nanotechnology (RS-172035)
DOI: 10.1002/minf.201800145
ISSN: 1868-1743
WoS: 000620702900001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85073932130
Collections
Institution/Community
Hemijski fakultet / Faculty of ChemistryTY - JOUR AU - Breberina, Luka M. AU - Zlatović, Mario AU - Nikolić, Milan AU - Stojanović, Srđan Đ. PY - 2019 UR - https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3790 AB - Protein-protein interactions are an important phenomenon in biological processes and functions. We used the manually curated non-redundant dataset of 118 phycocyanin interfaces to gain additional insight into this phenomenon using a robust inter-atomic non-covalent interaction analyzing tool PPCheck. Our observations indicate that there is a relatively high composition of hydrophobic residues at the interfaces. Most of the interface residues are clustered at the middle of the range which we call “standard-size” interfaces. Furthermore, the multiple interaction patterns founded in the present study indicate that more than half of the residues involved in these interactions participate in multiple and water-bridged hydrogen bonds. Thus, hydrogen bonds contribute maximally towards the stability of protein-protein complexes. The analysis shows that hydrogen bond energies contribute to about 88 % to the total energy and it also increases with interface size. Van der Waals (vdW) energy contributes to 9.3 %±1.7 % on average in these complexes. Moreover, there is about 1.9 %±1.5 % contribution by electrostatic energy. Nevertheless, the role by vdW and electrostatic energy could not be ignored in interface binding. Results show that the total binding energy is more for large phycocyanin interfaces. The normalized energy per residue was less than −16 kJ mol−1, while most of them have energy in the range from −6 to −14 kJ mol−1. The non-covalent interacting residues in these proteins were found to be highly conserved. Obtained results might contribute to the understanding of structural stability of this class of evolutionary essential proteins with increased practical application and future designs of novel protein-bioactive compound interactions. PB - Willey T2 - Molecular Informatics T1 - Computational Analysis of Non-covalent Interactions in Phycocyanin Subunit Interfaces VL - 38 IS - 11-12 SP - 1800145 DO - 10.1002/minf.201800145 ER -
@article{ author = "Breberina, Luka M. and Zlatović, Mario and Nikolić, Milan and Stojanović, Srđan Đ.", year = "2019", abstract = "Protein-protein interactions are an important phenomenon in biological processes and functions. We used the manually curated non-redundant dataset of 118 phycocyanin interfaces to gain additional insight into this phenomenon using a robust inter-atomic non-covalent interaction analyzing tool PPCheck. Our observations indicate that there is a relatively high composition of hydrophobic residues at the interfaces. Most of the interface residues are clustered at the middle of the range which we call “standard-size” interfaces. Furthermore, the multiple interaction patterns founded in the present study indicate that more than half of the residues involved in these interactions participate in multiple and water-bridged hydrogen bonds. Thus, hydrogen bonds contribute maximally towards the stability of protein-protein complexes. The analysis shows that hydrogen bond energies contribute to about 88 % to the total energy and it also increases with interface size. Van der Waals (vdW) energy contributes to 9.3 %±1.7 % on average in these complexes. Moreover, there is about 1.9 %±1.5 % contribution by electrostatic energy. Nevertheless, the role by vdW and electrostatic energy could not be ignored in interface binding. Results show that the total binding energy is more for large phycocyanin interfaces. The normalized energy per residue was less than −16 kJ mol−1, while most of them have energy in the range from −6 to −14 kJ mol−1. The non-covalent interacting residues in these proteins were found to be highly conserved. Obtained results might contribute to the understanding of structural stability of this class of evolutionary essential proteins with increased practical application and future designs of novel protein-bioactive compound interactions.", publisher = "Willey", journal = "Molecular Informatics", title = "Computational Analysis of Non-covalent Interactions in Phycocyanin Subunit Interfaces", volume = "38", number = "11-12", pages = "1800145", doi = "10.1002/minf.201800145" }
Breberina, L. M., Zlatović, M., Nikolić, M.,& Stojanović, S. Đ.. (2019). Computational Analysis of Non-covalent Interactions in Phycocyanin Subunit Interfaces. in Molecular Informatics Willey., 38(11-12), 1800145. https://doi.org/10.1002/minf.201800145
Breberina LM, Zlatović M, Nikolić M, Stojanović SĐ. Computational Analysis of Non-covalent Interactions in Phycocyanin Subunit Interfaces. in Molecular Informatics. 2019;38(11-12):1800145. doi:10.1002/minf.201800145 .
Breberina, Luka M., Zlatović, Mario, Nikolić, Milan, Stojanović, Srđan Đ., "Computational Analysis of Non-covalent Interactions in Phycocyanin Subunit Interfaces" in Molecular Informatics, 38, no. 11-12 (2019):1800145, https://doi.org/10.1002/minf.201800145 . .