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SimShift: Identifying Structural Similarities from NMR Chemical Shifts

Overview
Journal Bioinformatics
Specialty Biology
Date 2005 Dec 1
PMID 16317071
Citations 4
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Abstract

Motivation: An important quantity that arises in NMR spectroscopy experiments is the chemical shift. The interpretation of these data is mostly done by human experts; to our knowledge there are no algorithms that predict protein structure from chemical shift sequences alone. One approach to facilitate this process could be to compare two such sequences, where the structure of one protein has already been resolved. Our claim is that similarity of chemical shifts thereby found implies structural similarity of the respective proteins.

Results: We present an algorithm to identify structural similarities of proteins by aligning their associated chemical shift sequences. To evaluate the correctness of our predictions, we propose a benchmark set of protein pairs that have high structural similarity, but low sequence similarity (because with high sequence similarity the structural similarities could easily be detected by a sequence alignment algorithm). We compare our results with those of HHsearch and SSEA and show that our method outperforms both in >50% of all cases.

Citing Articles

Rapid and reliable protein structure determination via chemical shift threading.

Hafsa N, Berjanskii M, Arndt D, Wishart D J Biomol NMR. 2017; 70(1):33-51.

PMID: 29196969 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-017-0154-1.


CheckShift improved: fast chemical shift reference correction with high accuracy.

Ginzinger S, Skocibusic M, Heun V J Biomol NMR. 2009; 44(4):207-11.

PMID: 19575298 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-009-9330-2.


SimShiftDB; local conformational restraints derived from chemical shift similarity searches on a large synthetic database.

Ginzinger S, Coles M J Biomol NMR. 2009; 43(3):179-85.

PMID: 19224375 PMC: 2847166. DOI: 10.1007/s10858-009-9301-7.


CheckShift: automatic correction of inconsistent chemical shift referencing.

Ginzinger S, Gerick F, Coles M, Heun V J Biomol NMR. 2007; 39(3):223-7.

PMID: 17899394 DOI: 10.1007/s10858-007-9191-5.