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Authors
Blundell, Tom L.Hubbard, Tim
Johnson, Mark S.
McLeod, Alasdair
Overington, John P.
Sali, Andrej
Sutcliffe, Michael
Thomas, Pamela
Issue Date
1989Submitted date
2023-11-03
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Knowledge-based modelling can be envisaged as a number of steps concerned with the establishment and use of rules to generate a model of a protein. One of the most powerful procedures in learning rules is comparison of related Structures either through alignment of sequences to identify conserved residues or superposition of three dimensionalstructures to identify conserved conformations or motifs. Thus the first step in a knowledge-based modelling procedure is the systematic comparison of families of topologically similar structures. This step will lead to the establishment of "equivalences" between the structures compared and to their clustering based on measures of similarity. The second step involves the projection of the results of the comparisons of three dimensional structures down onto the level of sequence. This step establishes rules relating sequence to structure. These can be expressed as consensus sequences - templates - for topologically equivalenced residues, or as key residues in canonical structures, which are then used to align the sequence of the protein of unknown tertiary Structure. The third step uses the rules established in the second step to generate a three-dimensional model.Citation
Advances in protein design, 39 - 44Affiliation
Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Departmentof Crystallography, Birkbeck College, University of London, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HX, England.Journal
Advances in protein design, 1988Type
Book chapterconference paper
Language
enSeries/Report no.
GBF monographs ; Volume 12ISSN
0930-4320ISBN
35272802430895739534
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