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- Title
Protein domain organisation: adding order.
- Authors
Kummerfeld, Sarah K; Teichmann, Sarah A
- Abstract
Domains are the building blocks of proteins. During evolution, they have been duplicated, fused and recombined, to produce proteins with novel structures and functions. Structural and genome-scale studies have shown that pairs or groups of domains observed together in a protein are almost always found in only one N to C terminal order and are the result of a single recombination event that has been propagated by duplication of the multi-domain unit. Previous studies of domain organisation have used graph theory to represent the co-occurrence of domains within proteins. We build on this approach by adding directionality to the graphs and connecting nodes based on their relative order in the protein. Most of the time, the linear order of domains is conserved. However, using the directed graph representation we have identified non-linear features of domain organization that are over-represented in genomes. Recognising these patterns and unravelling how they have arisen may allow us to understand the functional relationships between domains and understand how the protein repertoire has evolved.
- Publication
BMC bioinformatics, 2009, Vol 10, p39
- ISSN
1471-2105
- Publication type
Journal Article
- DOI
10.1186/1471-2105-10-39