Authors
David A Liberles, Sarah A Teichmann, Ivet Bahar, Ugo Bastolla, Jesse Bloom, Erich Bornberg‐Bauer, Lucy J Colwell, AP Jason De Koning, Nikolay V Dokholyan, Julian Echave, Arne Elofsson, Dietlind L Gerloff, Richard A Goldstein, Johan A Grahnen, Mark T Holder, Clemens Lakner, Nicholas Lartillot, Simon C Lovell, Gavin Naylor, Tina Perica, David D Pollock, Tal Pupko, Lynne Regan, Andrew Roger, Nimrod Rubinstein, Eugene Shakhnovich, Kimmen Sjölander, Shamil Sunyaev, Ashley I Teufel, Jeffrey L Thorne, Joseph W Thornton, Daniel M Weinreich, Simon Whelan
Publication date
2012/6
Source
Protein Science
Volume
21
Issue
6
Pages
769-785
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Description
Abstract The interface of protein structural biology, protein biophysics, molecular evolution, and molecular population genetics forms the foundations for a mechanistic understanding of many aspects of protein biochemistry. Current efforts in interdisciplinary protein modeling are in their infancy and the state‐of‐the art of such models is described. Beyond the relationship between amino acid substitution and static protein structure, protein function, and corresponding organismal fitness, other considerations are also discussed. More complex mutational processes such as insertion and deletion and domain rearrangements and even circular permutations should be evaluated. The role of intrinsically disordered proteins is still controversial, but may be increasingly important to consider. Protein geometry and protein dynamics as a deviation from static considerations of protein structure are also important. Protein …
Total citations
20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242162524312010191917172014
Scholar articles