A critical evaluation of the predicted and X-ray structures of alpha-lactalbumin.

The rapidly increasing availability of protein amino-acid sequences, many of which have been determined from the corresponding gene sequences, has intensified interest in the prediction of related protein structures when the three-dimensional structure of another member of the family is known. The s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Acharya, K, Stuart, D, Phillips, D, Scheraga, H
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Kluwer Academic Publishers-Plenum Publishers 1990
Description
Summary:The rapidly increasing availability of protein amino-acid sequences, many of which have been determined from the corresponding gene sequences, has intensified interest in the prediction of related protein structures when the three-dimensional structure of another member of the family is known. The study of bovine alpha-Lactalbumin provides a classic example in which the three-dimensional structure was predicted, first by Browne et al. (1969) and later by Warme et al. (1974), from the three-dimensional structure of hen-egg-white lysozyme (Blake et al., 1965), taking into account the striking relationship between the amino acid sequences of the two proteins. A comprehensive comparison of these models with the structure of baboon alpha-Lactalbumin derived from X-ray crystallography (Acharya et al., 1989) is presented. The models mostly compare well with the experimentally determined structure except in the flexible C-terminal region of the molecule (rms deviation on C alpha s of residues 1-95, 1.1 A).