Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1979085 Current Opinion in Structural Biology 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recent years have seen the establishment of structural genomics centers that explicitly target integral membrane proteins. Here, we review the advances in targeting these extremely high-hanging fruits of structural biology in high-throughput mode. We observe that the experimental determination of high-resolution structures of integral membrane proteins is increasingly successful both in terms of getting structures and of covering important protein families, for example, from Pfam. Structural genomics has begun to contribute significantly toward this progress. An important component of this contribution is the set up of robotic pipelines that generate a wealth of experimental data for membrane proteins. We argue that prediction methods for the identification of membrane regions and for the comparison of membrane proteins largely suffice to meet the challenges of target selection for structural genomics of membrane proteins. In contrast, we need better methods to prioritize the most promising members in a family of closely related proteins and to annotate protein function from sequence and structure in absence of homology.

► Determination of integral membrane protein structures is increasingly successful. ► Structural genomics has begun to contribute significantly toward this progress. ► Solving structures for proteins in novel families is still a big challenge. ► Predictors that address target feasibility and function prediction are most needed.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
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