Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002905
Title: Viral Capsid Proteins Are Segregated in Structural Fold Space
Authors: Cheng S. 
Brooks III C.L.
Keywords: capsid protein
nucleocapsid protein
virus envelope protein
amino acid sequence
article
molecular evolution
molecular model
nonhuman
physical chemistry
protein analysis
protein database
protein domain
protein folding
protein function
protein protein interaction
scoring system
structure activity relation
structure analysis
virus capsid
Capsid Proteins
Cluster Analysis
Computational Biology
Databases, Protein
Models, Molecular
Protein Conformation
Protein Folding
Sequence Alignment
Sequence Analysis, Protein
Issue Date: 2013
Citation: Cheng S., Brooks III C.L. (2013). Viral Capsid Proteins Are Segregated in Structural Fold Space. PLoS Computational Biology 9 (2) : e1002905. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002905
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Viral capsid proteins assemble into large, symmetrical architectures that are not found in complexes formed by their cellular counterparts. Given the prevalence of the signature jelly-roll topology in viral capsid proteins, we are interested in whether these functionally unique capsid proteins are also structurally unique in terms of folds. To explore this question, we applied a structure-alignment based clustering of all protein chains in VIPERdb filtered at 40% sequence identity to identify distinct capsid folds, and compared the cluster medoids with a non-redundant subset of protein domains in the SCOP database, not including the viral capsid entries. This comparison, using Template Modeling (TM)-score, identified 2078 structural "relatives" of capsid proteins from the non-capsid set, covering altogether 210 folds following the definition in SCOP. The statistical significance of the 210 folds shared by two sets of the same sizes, estimated from 10,000 permutation tests, is less than 0.0001, which is an upper bound on the p-value. We thus conclude that viral capsid proteins are segregated in structural fold space. Our result provides novel insight on how structural folds of capsid proteins, as opposed to their surface chemistry, might be constrained during evolution by requirement of the assembled cage-like architecture. Also importantly, our work highlights a guiding principle for virus-based nanoplatform design in a wide range of biomedical applications and materials science. © 2013 Cheng and Brooks, III.
Source Title: PLoS Computational Biology
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/161624
ISSN: 1553734X
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002905
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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