Abstract

Abstract For a successful analysis of the relation between amino acid sequence and protein structure, an unambiguous and physically meaningful definition of secondary structure is essential. We have developed a set of simple and physically motivated criteria for secondary structure, programmed as a pattern‐recognition process of hydrogen‐bonded and geometrical features extracted from x‐ray coordinates. Cooperative secondary structure is recognized as repeats of the elementary hydrogen‐bonding patterns “turn” and “bridge.” Repeating turns are “helices,” repeating bridges are “ladders,” connected ladders are “sheets.” Geometric structure is defined in terms of the concepts torsion and curvature of differential geometry. Local chain “chirality” is the torsional handedness of four consecutive C α positions and is positive for right‐handed helices and negative for ideal twisted β‐sheets. Curved pieces are defined as “bends.” Solvent “exposure” is given as the number of water molecules in possible contact with a residue. The end result is a compilation of the primary structure, including SS bonds, secondary structure, and solvent exposure of 62 different globular proteins. The presentation is in linear form: strip graphs for an overall view and strip tables for the details of each of 10.925 residues. The dictionary is also available in computer‐readable form for protein structure prediction work.

Keywords

Protein secondary structureChemistryHydrogen bondTorsion (gastropod)CurvatureCrystallographyGlobular proteinLoop modelingMoleculeProtein structureGeometryMathematicsProtein structure prediction

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Publication Info

Year
1983
Type
article
Volume
22
Issue
12
Pages
2577-2637
Citations
15389
Access
Closed

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Wolfgang Kabsch, Christian Sander (1983). Dictionary of protein secondary structure: Pattern recognition of hydrogen‐bonded and geometrical features. Biopolymers , 22 (12) , 2577-2637. https://doi.org/10.1002/bip.360221211

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DOI
10.1002/bip.360221211