BMRB Logo

Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank


A Repository for Data from NMR Spectroscopy on Proteins, Peptides, Nucleic Acids, and other Biomolecules

Search Archive Deposit Data NMR Statistics Spectroscopists' Corner Programmers' Corner Home
Site Map FTP Access Structural Genomics
and other "omics"
Metabolomics Educational Outreach NMR Data Formats WWW Sites
Tools menu
  Protein structural class identification directly from NMR spectra using averaged chemical shifts.

Mielke SP, Krishnan VV.


Biophysics Graduate Group, University of California,
Davis, CA 95616, USA.



Abstract: Knowledge of the three-dimensional structure of proteins is integral to understanding their functions, and a necessity in the era of proteomics. A wide range of computational methods is employed to estimate the secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures of proteins. Comprehensive experimental methods, on the other hand, are limited to nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and X-ray crystallography. The full characterization of individual structures, using either of these techniques, is extremely time intensive. The demands of high throughput proteomics necessitate the development of new, faster experimental methods for providing structural information. As a first step toward such a method, we explore the possibility of determining the structural classes of proteins directly from their NMR spectra, prior to resonance assignment, using averaged chemical shifts. This is achieved by correlating NMR-based information with empirical structure-based information available in widely used electronic databases. The results are analyzed statistically for their significance. The robustness of the method as a structure predictor is probed by applying it to a set of proteins of unknown structure. Our results show that this NMR-based method can be used as a low-resolution tool for protein structural class identification.

PMID: 14594710 [PubMed - in process]

Bioinformatics. 2003 Nov 1;19(16):2054-64.






 
Contact bmrbhelp@bmrb.wisc.edu if you have any questions about this site

Copyright © The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System.
Last Modified: