Same but not alike: Structure, flexibility and energetics of domains in multi-domain proteins are influenced by the presence of other domains
Sneha Vishwanath (Molecular Biophysics Unit), Alexandre De Brevern, (BIGR), Narayanaswamy Srinivasan

TL;DR
This study investigates how the presence of other domains in multi-domain proteins affects their structure, dynamics, energetics, and function, revealing significant differences from single-domain proteins due to tethering effects.
Contribution
It provides detailed comparative analysis of domain properties in single- and multi-domain proteins, highlighting the influence of tethering on structure and function.
Findings
50% of domain pairs show structural deviations
90% exhibit differences in dynamics
12% show energetic residue differences
Abstract
The majority of the proteins encoded in the genomes of eukaryotes contain more than one domain. Reasons for high prevalence of multi-domain proteins in various organisms have been attributed to higher stability and functional and folding advantages over single-domain proteins. Despite these advantages, many proteins are composed of only one domain while their homologous domains are part of multi-domain proteins. In the study presented here, differences in the properties of protein domains in single-domain and multi-domain systems and their influence on functions are discussed. We studied 20 pairs of identical protein domains, which were crystallized in two forms (a) tethered to other proteins domains and (b) tethered to fewer protein domains than (a) or not tethered to any protein domain. Results suggest that tethering of domains in multi-domain proteins influences the structural,…
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