Lou Holland, Phuong Thao Pham, Haroldas Bagdonas, Jordan S Dialpuri, Lucy C Schofield, Jon Agirre
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Methods for detecting, building, and improving tryptophan mannosylation in glycoprotein structures.
Tryptophan mannosylation, the covalent addition of an α-ᴅ-mannose sugar to a tryptophan side chain, is a post-translational modification (PTM) that can affect protein stability, folding, and interactions. Compared to other forms of protein glycosylation, it is relatively uncommon but is affected by conformational anomalies and modeling errors similar to those seen in N- and O-glycans in the Protein Data Bank (PDB). In this work, we report methods for detecting, building, and improving mannose structures linked to tryptophans. These methods have been used to mine X-ray crystallographic and cryo-electron microscopy maps in the PDB looking for unmodeled mannosylation, resulting in a number of cases where the modification can be placed in the map with high confidence. Additionally, we address most conformational issues affecting this modification. Finally, the development of a structural template to recognize thrombospondin repeats (TSR) domains where tryptophan mannosylation occurs will allow for the mannosylation of candidate-predicted models, for example, those predicted with AlphaFold.
期刊介绍:
Protein Science, the flagship journal of The Protein Society, is a publication that focuses on advancing fundamental knowledge in the field of protein molecules. The journal welcomes original reports and review articles that contribute to our understanding of protein function, structure, folding, design, and evolution.
Additionally, Protein Science encourages papers that explore the applications of protein science in various areas such as therapeutics, protein-based biomaterials, bionanotechnology, synthetic biology, and bioelectronics.
The journal accepts manuscript submissions in any suitable format for review, with the requirement of converting the manuscript to journal-style format only upon acceptance for publication.
Protein Science is indexed and abstracted in numerous databases, including the Agricultural & Environmental Science Database (ProQuest), Biological Science Database (ProQuest), CAS: Chemical Abstracts Service (ACS), Embase (Elsevier), Health & Medical Collection (ProQuest), Health Research Premium Collection (ProQuest), Materials Science & Engineering Database (ProQuest), MEDLINE/PubMed (NLM), Natural Science Collection (ProQuest), and SciTech Premium Collection (ProQuest).