Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

An atlas of protein homo-oligomerization across domains of life

Hugo Schweke, Martin Pacesa, Tal Levin, Casper A. Goverde, Prasun Kumar, Yoan Duhoo, Lars J. Dornfeld, Benjamin Dubreuil, Sandrine Georgeon, Sergey Ovchinnikov, Derek N. Woolfson, Bruno E. Correia, Sucharita Dey, Emmanuel D. Levy

CELL(2024)

Cited 0|Views7
No score
Abstract
Protein structures are essential to understanding cellular processes in molecular detail. While advances in artificial intelligence revealed the tertiary structure of proteins at scale, their quaternary structure remains mostly unknown. We devise a scalable strategy based on AlphaFold2 to predict homo-oligomeric assemblies across four proteomes spanning the tree of life. Our results suggest that approximately 45% of an archaeal proteome and a bacterial proteome and 20% of two eukaryotic proteomes form homomers. Our predictions accurately capture protein homo-oligomerization, recapitulate megadalton complexes, and unveil hundreds of homo-oligomer types, including three confirmed experimentally by structure determination. Integrating these datasets with omics information suggests that a majority of known protein complexes are symmetric. Finally, these datasets provide a structural context for interpreting disease mutations and reveal coiled -coil regions as major enablers of quaternary structure evolution in human. Our strategy is applicable to any organism and provides a comprehensive view of homo-oligomerization in proteomes.
More
Translated text
Key words
Protein structure,Symmetry,homo-oligomer,AlphaFold2,Structure prediction,Protein complexes,evolution,Single nucleotide polymorphisms,homomer,structuromics
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined