Several potential applications of structural biology depend on discovering how one macromolecule might recognize a partner. Experiment remains the best way to answer this question, but computational tools can contribute where this fails. In such cases, structures may be studied to identify patches of exposed residues that have properties common to interaction surfaces and the locations of these patches can serve as the basis for further modelling or for further experimentation. To date, interaction surfaces have been proposed on the basis of unusual physical properties, unusual propensities for particular amino-acid types or an unusually high level of sequence conservation. Using the CXXSurface toolkit, developed as a part of the CCP4MG program, a suite of tools to analyse the properties of surfaces and their interfaces in complexes has been prepared and applied. These tools have enabled the rapid analysis of known complexes to evaluate the distribution of (i) hydrophobicity, (ii) electrostatic complementarity and (iii) sequence conservation in authentic complexes, so as to assess the extent to which these properties may be useful indicators of probable biological function.
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BSC, Dept Life Sci, Joint BSC IRB Res Program Computat Biol, Barcelona 08034, SpainBSC, Dept Life Sci, Joint BSC IRB Res Program Computat Biol, Barcelona 08034, Spain
Moal, Iain H.
Dapkunas, Justas
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Vilnius Univ, Inst Biotechnol, LT-02241 Vilnius, LithuaniaBSC, Dept Life Sci, Joint BSC IRB Res Program Computat Biol, Barcelona 08034, Spain
Dapkunas, Justas
Fernandez-Recio, Juan
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BSC, Dept Life Sci, Joint BSC IRB Res Program Computat Biol, Barcelona 08034, SpainBSC, Dept Life Sci, Joint BSC IRB Res Program Computat Biol, Barcelona 08034, Spain
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Cornell Univ, Weill Med Coll, Inst Computat Biomed, Dept Physiol & Biophys, New York, NY 10021 USAWellcome Trust Sanger Inst, Cambridge CB10 1SA, England