1. Reassessing buried surface areas in protein-protein complexes.
- Author
-
Chakravarty D, Guharoy M, Robert CH, Chakrabarti P, and Janin J
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, Amino Acids chemistry, Amino Acids metabolism, Multiprotein Complexes chemistry, Multiprotein Complexes metabolism, Proteins chemistry, Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
The buried surface area (BSA), which measures the size of the interface in a protein-protein complex may differ from the accessible surface area (ASA) lost upon association (which we call DSA), if conformation changes take place. To evaluate the DSA, we measure the ASA of the interface atoms in the bound and unbound states of the components of 144 protein-protein complexes taken from the Protein-Protein Interaction Affinity Database of Kastritis et al. (2011). We observe differences exceeding 20%, and a systematic bias in the distribution. On average, the ASA calculated in the bound state of the components is 3.3% greater than in their unbound state, and the BSA, 7% greater than the DSA. The bias is observed even in complexes where the conformation changes are small. An examination of the bound and unbound structures points to a possible origin: local movements optimize contacts with the other component at the cost of internal contacts, and presumably also the binding free energy., (© 2013 The Protein Society.)
- Published
- 2013
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