4.1 Article

Occurrence of protein disulfide bonds in different domains of life: a comparison of proteins from the Protein Data Bank

Journal

PROTEIN ENGINEERING DESIGN & SELECTION
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 65-72

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/protein/gzt063

Keywords

Archaea; Bacteria; Eukarya; PDB; SS bond

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Education and Sports of the Republic of Croatia [058 0582261 2246, 001 0010501 0560, 098 1770495 2919]

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Disulfide bonds (SS bonds) are important post-translational modifications of proteins. They stabilize a three-dimensional (3D) structure (structural SS bonds) and also have the catalytic or regulatory functions (redox-active SS bonds). Although SS bonds are present in all groups of organisms, no comparative analyses of their frequency in proteins from different domains of life have been made to date. Using the Protein Data Bank, the number and subcellular locations of SS bonds in Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya have been compared. Approximately three times higher frequency of proteins with SS bonds in eukaryotic secretory organelles (e.g. endoplasmic reticulum) than in bacterial periplasmic/secretory pathways was calculated. Protein length also affects the SS bond frequency: the average number of SS bonds is positively correlated with the length for longer proteins (200 amino acids), while for the shorter and less stable proteins (200 amino acids) this correlation is negative. Medium-sized proteins (250350 amino acids) indicated a high number of SS bonds only in Archaea which could be explained by the need for additional protein stabilization in hyperthermophiles. The results emphasize higher capacity for the SS bond formation and isomerization in Eukarya when compared with Archaea and Bacteria.

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