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Title: Inter-residue and solvent-residue interactions in proteins: a statistical study on experimental structures. Author: Chelli R, Gervasio FL, Procacci P, Schettino V. Journal: Proteins; 2004 Apr 01; 55(1):139-51. PubMed ID: 14997548. Abstract: A large set of protein structures resolved by X-ray or NMR techniques has been extracted from the Protein Data Bank and analyzed using statistical methods. In particular, we investigate the interactions between side chains and the interactions between solvent and side chains, pointing out on the possibility of including the solvent as part of a knowledge-based potential. The solvent-residue contacts are accounted for on the basis of the Voronoi's polyhedron analysis. Our investigation confirms the importance of hydrophobic residues in determining the protein stability. We observe that in general hydrophobic-hydrophobic interactions and, more specifically, aromatic-aromatic contacts tend to be increasingly distally separated in the primary sequence of proteins, thus connecting distinct secondary structure elements. A simple relation expressing the dependence of the protein free energy by the number of residues is proposed. Such a relation includes both the residue-residue and the solvent-residue contributions. The former is dominant for large size proteins, whereas for small sizes (number of residues less than 100) the two terms are comparable. Gapless threading experiments show that the solvent-residue knowledge-based potential yields a significant contribution with respect to discriminating the native structure of proteins. Such contribution is important especially for proteins of small size and is similar to that given by the most favorable residue-residue knowledge-based potential referring to hydrophobic-hydrophobic interactions such as isoleucine-leucine. In general, the inclusion of the solvent-residue interaction produces a relevant increase of the free energy gap between the native structures and decoys.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]