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Showing papers by "Gautam Basu published in 2004"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2004-Proteins
TL;DR: The residue composition at the beginning of the hydrogen bonded AAA α‐turn has similarity with type I β‐turn and N‐terminal positions of helices, but the last position matches with the C‐ terminal capping position of helics, suggesting that the existence of a “helix cap signal” at i+4 position prevents α‐ turns from growing into helices.
Abstract: Like the beta-turns, which are characterized by a limiting distance between residues two positions apart (i, i+3), a distance criterion (involving residues at positions i and i+4) is used here to identify alpha-turns from a database of known protein structures. At least 15 classes of alpha-turns have been enumerated based on the location in the phi,psi space of the three central residues (i+1 to i+3)-one of the major being the class AAA, where the residues occupy the conventional helical backbone torsion angles. However, moving towards the C-terminal end of the turn, there is a shift in the phi,psi angles towards more negative phi, such that the electrostatic repulsion between two consecutive carbonyl oxygen atoms is reduced. Except for the last position (i+4), there is not much similarity in residue composition at different positions of hydrogen and non-hydrogen bonded AAA turns. The presence or absence of Pro at i+1 position of alpha- and beta-turns has a bearing on whether the turn is hydrogen-bonded or without a hydrogen bond. In the tertiary structure, alpha-turns are more likely to be found in beta-hairpin loops. The residue composition at the beginning of the hydrogen bonded AAA alpha-turn has similarity with type I beta-turn and N-terminal positions of helices, but the last position matches with the C-terminal capping position of helices, suggesting that the existence of a "helix cap signal" at i+4 position prevents alpha-turns from growing into helices. Our results also provide new insights into alpha-helix nucleation and folding.

37 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Electrostatic potential patterns at adenine and guanine-binding sites of a large number of non-redundant proteins are analyzed and ligand-free protein ESP is demonstrated to be an excellent indicator for discrimination between adenines and guAnine-specific binding sites.

24 citations