학술논문

Towards a comprehensive structural coverage of completed genomes: a structural genomics viewpoint.
Document Type
Article
Source
BMC Bioinformatics. 2007, Vol. 8, p86-17. 17p. 4 Charts, 10 Graphs.
Subject
*GENOMICS
*PROTEINS
*GENOMES
*BIOMOLECULES
*BIOINFORMATICS
Language
ISSN
1471-2105
Abstract
Background: Structural genomics initiatives were established with the aim of solving protein structures on a large-scale. For many initiatives, such as the Protein Structure Initiative (PSI), the primary aim of target selection is focussed towards structurally characterising protein families which, so far, lack a structural representative. It is therefore of considerable interest to gain insights into the number and distribution of these families, and what efforts may be required to achieve a comprehensive structural coverage across all protein families. Results: In this analysis we have derived a comprehensive domain annotation of the genomes using CATH, Pfam-A and Newfam domain families. We consider what proportions of structurally uncharacterised families are accessible to high-throughput structural genomics pipelines, specifically those targeting families containing multiple prokaryotic orthologues. In measuring the domain coverage of the genomes, we show the benefits of selecting targets from both structurally uncharacterised domain families, whilst in addition, pursuing additional targets from large structurally characterised protein superfamilies. Conclusion: This work suggests that such a combined approach to target selection is essential if structural genomics is to achieve a comprehensive structural coverage of the genomes, leading to greater insights into structure and the mechanisms that underlie protein evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]