It is well known that, in order to preserve its structure and function, a protein cannot change its sequence at random, but only by mutations occurring preferentially at specific locations. We here investigate quantitatively the amount of variability that is allowed in protein sequence evolution, by computing the intrinsic dimension (ID) of the sequences belonging to a selection of protein families. The ID is a measure of the number of independent directions that evolution can take starting from a given sequence. We find that the ID is practically constant for sequences belonging to the same family, and moreover it is very similar in different families, with values ranging between 6 and 12. These values are significantly smaller than the ra...
<div><p>The currently known protein sequences are not distributed equally in sequence space, but clu...
The figure-to-structure maps for all uniquely folding sequences of short hydrophobic polar (HP) mode...
Statistical analysis of alignments of large numbers of protein sequences has revealed “sectors” of c...
It is well known that, in order to preserve its structure and function, a protein cannot change its ...
<div><p>The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence n...
The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence networks....
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://genome.cshlp.org/content/...
The size dependent complexity of protein sequences in various families in the FSSP database is chara...
Abstract: The genotype-phenotype mapping of proteins is a fundamental question in structural biology...
The evolutionary trajectory of a protein through sequence space is constrained by its function. Coll...
Background: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids ’ physic...
ABSTRACT It has been observed that the size of protein sequence families is unevenly distrib-uted, w...
Intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) are regions of proteins that do not autonomously fold into s...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
<div><p>The correspondence between protein sequences and structures, or <i>sequence-structure map</i...
<div><p>The currently known protein sequences are not distributed equally in sequence space, but clu...
The figure-to-structure maps for all uniquely folding sequences of short hydrophobic polar (HP) mode...
Statistical analysis of alignments of large numbers of protein sequences has revealed “sectors” of c...
It is well known that, in order to preserve its structure and function, a protein cannot change its ...
<div><p>The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence n...
The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence networks....
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://genome.cshlp.org/content/...
The size dependent complexity of protein sequences in various families in the FSSP database is chara...
Abstract: The genotype-phenotype mapping of proteins is a fundamental question in structural biology...
The evolutionary trajectory of a protein through sequence space is constrained by its function. Coll...
Background: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids ’ physic...
ABSTRACT It has been observed that the size of protein sequence families is unevenly distrib-uted, w...
Intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) are regions of proteins that do not autonomously fold into s...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
<div><p>The correspondence between protein sequences and structures, or <i>sequence-structure map</i...
<div><p>The currently known protein sequences are not distributed equally in sequence space, but clu...
The figure-to-structure maps for all uniquely folding sequences of short hydrophobic polar (HP) mode...
Statistical analysis of alignments of large numbers of protein sequences has revealed “sectors” of c...