Journal article
Automatic classification of protein structure by using Gauss integrals
We introduce a method of looking at, analyzing, and comparing protein structures. The topology of a protein is captured by 30 numbers inspired by Vassiliev knot invariants. To illustrate the simplicity and power of this topological approach, we construct a measure (scaled Gauss metric, SGM) of similarity of protein shapes.
Under this metric, protein chains naturally separate into fold clusters. We use SGM to construct an automatic classification procedure for the CATH2.4 database. The method is very fast because it requires neither alignment of the chains nor any chain-chain comparison. It also has only one adjustable parameter.
We assign 95.51% of the chains into the proper C (class), A (architecture), T (topology), and H (homologous superfamily) fold, find all new folds, and detect no false geometric positives. Using the SGM, we display a "map" of the space of folds projected onto two dimensions, show the relative locations of the major structural classes, and "zoom into" the space of proteins to show architecture, topology, and fold clusters.
The existence of a simple measure of a protein fold computed from the chain path will have a major impact on automatic fold classification.
Language: | English |
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Publisher: | The National Academy of Sciences |
Year: | 2003 |
Pages: | 119-124 |
ISSN: | 10916490 and 00278424 |
Types: | Journal article |
DOI: | 10.1073/pnas.2636460100 |
ORCIDs: | Røgen, Peter |
Biophysics CATH Protein Database CATH protein database|scaled Gauss metric|structural genomics| knot theory Knot Theory Models, Molecular Normal Distribution Probability Protein Conformation Protein Structure, Secondary Proteins Reproducibility of Results Scaled Gauss Metric Structural Genomics