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Structural proteomics of minimal organisms: conservation of protein fold usage and
evolutionary implications
Abstract
Background: Determining the complete repertoire of protein structures for all soluble, globular proteins in a single organism has been one of the major goals of several structural genomics projects in recent years. Results: We report that this goal has nearly been reached for several "minimal organisms"--parasites or symbionts with reduced genomes--for which over 95 percent of the soluble, globular proteins may now be assigned folds, overall 3-D backbone structures. We analyze the structures of these proteins as they relate to cellular functions, and compare conservation off old usage between functional categories. We also compare patterns in the conservation off olds among minimal organisms and those observed between minimal organisms and other bacteria. Conclusion: We find that proteins performing essential cellular functions closely related to transcription and translation exhibit a higher degree of conservation in fold usage than proteins in other functional categories. Folds related to transcription and translation functional categories were also over represented in minimal organisms compared to other bacteria.
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