Quantile distributions of amino acid usage in protein classes.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_B754DE529B47
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Quantile distributions of amino acid usage in protein classes.
Journal
Protein engineering
Author(s)
Karlin S., Blaisdell B.E., Bucher P.
ISSN
0269-2139 (Print)
ISSN-L
0269-2139
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/1992
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
5
Number
8
Pages
729-738
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Comparative Study ; Journal Article ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
A comparative study of the compositional properties of various protein sets from both cellular and viral organisms is presented. Invariants and contrasts of amino acid usages have been discerned for different protein function classes and for different species using robust statistical methods based on quantile distributions and stochastic ordering relationships. In addition, a quantitative criterion to assess amino acid compositional extremes relative to a reference protein set is proposed and applied. Invariants of amino acid usage relate mainly to the central range of quantile distributions, whereas contrasts occur mainly in the tails of the distributions, especially contrasts between eukaryote and prokaryote species. Influences from genomic constraint are evident, for example, in the arginine:lysine ratios and the usage frequencies of residues encoded by G + C-rich versus A + T-rich codon types. The structurally similar amino acids, glutamate versus aspartate and phenylalanine versus tyrosine, show stochastic dominance relationships for most species protein sets favoring glutamate and phenylalanine respectively. The quantile distribution of hydrophobic amino acid usages in prokaryote data dominates the corresponding quantile distribution in human data. In contrast, glutamate, cysteine, proline and serine usages in human proteins dominate the corresponding quantile distributions in Escherichia coli. E. coli dominates human in the use of basic residues, but no dominance ordering applies to acidic residues. The discussion centers on commonalities and anomalies of the amino acid compositional spectrum in relation to species, function, cellular localization, biochemical and steric attributes, complexity of the amino acid biosynthetic pathway, amino acid relative abundances and founder effects.
Keywords
Amino Acids/analysis, Amino Acids/classification, Amino Acids/genetics, Animals, Bacterial Proteins/chemistry, Bacterial Proteins/classification, Bacterial Proteins/genetics, Base Composition, Codon, Databases, Factual, Enzymes/chemistry, Enzymes/classification, Enzymes/genetics, Fungal Proteins/chemistry, Fungal Proteins/classification, Fungal Proteins/genetics, Humans, Insecta/chemistry, Nuclear Proteins/chemistry, Nuclear Proteins/classification, Nuclear Proteins/genetics, Protein Structure, Secondary, Proteins/chemistry, Proteins/classification, Proteins/genetics, Viral Proteins/chemistry, Viral Proteins/classification, Viral Proteins/genetics
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
13/07/2018 10:05
Last modification date
25/05/2024 6:12
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