Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5914488 | Journal of Structural Biology | 2012 | 15 Pages |
Recent advances in three-dimensional electron microscopy (3D EM) have enabled the quantitative visualization of the structural building blocks of proteins at improved resolutions. We provide algorithms to detect the secondary structures (α-helices and β-sheets) from proteins for which the volumetric maps are reconstructed at 6-10 à resolution. Additionally, we show that when the resolution is coarser than 10 à , some of the supersecondary structures can be detected from 3D EM maps. For both these algorithms, we employ tools from computational geometry and differential topology, specifically the computation of stable/unstable manifolds of certain critical points of the distance function induced by the molecular surface. Our results connect mathematically well-defined constructions with bio-chemically induced structures observed in proteins.