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Designing amino acid sequences to fold with good hydrophobic cores

  • University of California at San Francisco

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

100 Scopus citations

Abstract

We present two methods for designing amino acid sequences of proteins that will fold to have good hydrophobic cores. Given the coordinates of the desired target protein or polymer structure, the methods generate sequences of hydrophobic (H) and polar (P) monomers that are intended to fold to these structures. One method designs hydrophobic inside, polar outside; the other minimizes an energy function in a sequence evolution process. The sequences generated by these methods agree at the level of 60-80% of the sequence positions in 20 proteins in the Protein Data Bank. A major challenge in protein design is to create sequences that can fold uniquely, i.e. to a single conformation rather than to many. While an earlier lattice-based sequence evolution method was shown not to design unique folders, our method generates unique folders in lattice model tests. These methods may also be useful in designing other types of foldable polymer not based on amino acids.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1205-1213
Number of pages9
JournalProtein Engineering, Design and Selection
Volume8
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1995

Keywords

  • Evolutionary search method
  • HP sequence
  • Inverse folding

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