The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence networks. The nodes represent individual sequences, and two nodes are connected by an edge if the global sequence identity of two sequences exceeds a threshold. The networks were characterized by their degree distribution (number of nodes with a given number of neighbors) and by their fractal network dimension. Although the five protein families differed in sequence length, fold, and domain arrangement, their network properties were similar. The fractal network dimension Df was distance-dependent: a high dimension for single and double mutants (Df = 4.0), which dropped to Df = 0.7-1.0 at 90% sequence identity, and increased to Df = 3.5-4.5 below 70% s...
Many protein classification systems capture homologous relationships by grouping domains into famili...
Whole genome protein-protein association networks are not random and their topological properties st...
Whole genome protein-protein association networks are not random and their topological properties st...
<div><p>The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence n...
<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...
Background: Many protein sequences, often unrelated, adopt similar folds. Sequences folding into the...
Genomes maybe organized as networks where protein-protein association plays the role of network link...
Considering that many amino acid sequences that fold into a common main chain structure form a perco...
It is well known that, in order to preserve its structure and function, a protein cannot change its ...
The organization of protein structures in protein genotype space is well studied. The same does not ...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://genome.cshlp.org/content/...
Sequence-structure relationships in proteins are highly asymmetric since many sequences fold into re...
Many protein classification systems capture homologous relationships by grouping domains into famili...
<div><p>The correspondence between protein sequences and structures, or <i>sequence-structure map</i...
Many protein classification systems capture homologous relationships by grouping domains into famili...
Whole genome protein-protein association networks are not random and their topological properties st...
Whole genome protein-protein association networks are not random and their topological properties st...
<div><p>The sequence space of five protein superfamilies was investigated by constructing sequence n...
<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...
Background: Many protein sequences, often unrelated, adopt similar folds. Sequences folding into the...
Genomes maybe organized as networks where protein-protein association plays the role of network link...
Considering that many amino acid sequences that fold into a common main chain structure form a perco...
It is well known that, in order to preserve its structure and function, a protein cannot change its ...
The organization of protein structures in protein genotype space is well studied. The same does not ...
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://genome.cshlp.org/content/...
Sequence-structure relationships in proteins are highly asymmetric since many sequences fold into re...
Many protein classification systems capture homologous relationships by grouping domains into famili...
<div><p>The correspondence between protein sequences and structures, or <i>sequence-structure map</i...
Many protein classification systems capture homologous relationships by grouping domains into famili...
Whole genome protein-protein association networks are not random and their topological properties st...
Whole genome protein-protein association networks are not random and their topological properties st...