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Systematic Classification and Analysis of Themes in Protein−DNA Recognition

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journal contribution
posted on 2010-08-23, 00:00 authored by Peng Zhou, Feifei Tian, Yanrong Ren, Zhicai Shang
Protein−DNA recognition plays a central role in the regulation of gene expression. With the rapidly increasing number of protein−DNA complex structures available at atomic resolution in recent years, a systematic, complete, and intuitive framework to clarify the intrinsic relationship between the global binding modes of these complexes is needed. In this work, we modified, extended, and applied previously defined RNA-recognition themes to describe protein−DNA recognition and used a protocol that incorporates automatic methods into manual inspection to plant a comprehensive classification tree for currently available high-quality protein−DNA structures. Further, a nonredundant (representative) data set consisting of 200 thematically diverse complexes was extracted from the leaves of the classification tree by using a locally sensitive interface comparison algorithm. On the basis of the representative data set, various physical and chemical properties associated with protein−DNA interactions were analyzed using empirical or semiempirical methods. We also examined the individual energetic components involved in protein−DNA interactions and highlighted the importance of conformational entropy, which has been almost completely ignored in previous studies of protein−DNA binding energy.

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