Protein loops, solitons and side-chain visualization with applications to the left-handed helix region
Martin Lundgren, Antti J. Niemi, Fan Sha

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel visualization method for protein backbone and side-chain structures using a two-sphere geometry, revealing residue-independent patterns and solitons, especially in the left-handed helix region.
Contribution
The authors develop a two-sphere based visualization technique that captures the entire backbone environment and side-chain atoms, providing new insights into protein modular structures and solitons.
Findings
Residue-independent localization in the left-handed helix region
Identification of backbone solitons extending over seven residues
Regular, amino acid-independent structures in left-handed beta-turns
Abstract
Folded proteins have a modular assembly. They are constructed from regular secondary structures like alpha-helices and beta-strands that are joined together by loops. Here we develop a visualization technique that is adapted to describe this modular structure. In complement to the widely employed Ramachandran plot that is based on toroidal geometry, our approach utilizes the geometry of a two-sphere. Unlike the more conventional approaches that only describea given peptide unit, ours is capable of describing the entire backbone environment including the neighboring peptide units. It maps the positions of each atom to the surface of the two-sphere exactly how these atoms are seen by an observer who is located at the position of the central C-alpha atom. At each level of side-chain atoms we observe a strong correlation between the positioning of the atom and the underlying local secondary…
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