info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Conformational diversity and the emergence of sequence signatures during evolution
Fecha
2015-03Registro en:
Parisi, Gustavo Daniel; Zea, Diego Javier; Monzón, Alexander; Marino Buslje, Cristina; Conformational diversity and the emergence of sequence signatures during evolution; Current Biology; Current Opinion In Structural Biology; 32; 3-2015; 58-65
0959-440X
1879-033X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Parisi, Gustavo Daniel
Zea, Diego Javier
Monzón, Alexander
Marino Buslje, Cristina
Resumen
Proteins' native structure is an ensemble of conformers in equilibrium, including all their respective functional states and intermediates. The induced-fit first and the pre-equilibrium theories later, described how structural changes are required to explain the allosteric and cooperative behaviours in proteins, which are key to protein function. The conformational ensemble concept has become a key tool in explaining an endless list of essential protein properties such as function, enzyme and antibody promiscuity, signal transduction, protein-protein recognition, origin of diseases, origin of new protein functions, evolutionary rate and order-disorder transitions, among others. Conformational diversity is encoded by the amino acid sequence and such a signature can be evidenced through evolutionary studies as evolutionary rate, conservation and coevolution.