15
(continued)
Biophysics
What are the biophysical properties (solubility, stability, helix content,
etc.) of my protein?
Imaging
How can proteins be visualized and images analyzed?
IT infrastructure
Computer infrastructure, service
Drug design
Helping to create new drugs to specifically target a protein
Glycomics
How sugar residues further modify proteins. In particular, this is how
cells recognise their cell neighbours, bacteria cling to glycoproteins.
Sugar-binding proteins are called lectins
How Do I Identify Important Amino Acids for Protein Function?
The PROSITE page is particularly helpful for this.
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https://prosite.expasy.org
This examines an entered protein sequence to determine whether or not certain sequence
motifs are preserved, for example signatures (hand-curated) or profiles (automatically cal
culated, consensus sequences, taking different sequences into account) that indicate a par
ticular enzyme function.
This allows me to check whether my protein sequence is really an active enzyme (then
all amino acids for catalysis are complete) or whether it only looks like one. If this happens
in a genome sequence, this is termed a “pseudogene”, a “false” gene regarding the enzyme
function because important catalytic amino acids are missing and the enzyme therefore
cannot function.
In addition, the independent folding units in the protein, the protein domains, are also
examined to see whether they are present in the protein, e.g. whether all parts, i.e. domains,
are present for a functional enzyme: at least one catalytic domain (50–150 amino acids)
that carries out the enzymatic reaction. This is then often joined by numerous other types,
e.g. DNA interaction if it is a transcription factor. Examples are:
• cofactor-binding domains (if the enzyme binds a cofactor),
• regulatory domains (for switching the enzyme on and off),
• interaction domains (with other proteins or to form dimers of two identical protein units
for the enzyme, e.g. glutathione reductase only functions as a dimer, so needs an inter
action domain for its function),
• structural domains (e.g., if it is a structural protein, like collagen).
How Can I Estimate the Protein Structure?
Structure prediction with homology modelling, for example by SWISS-MODEL, is help
ful for this.
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https://swissmodel.expasy.org
SWISS-MODEL offers the possibility to predict the three-dimensional structure of the
protein based on the sequence.
1.2 Protein Analysis Is Easy with the Right Tool