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. 2000 Mar 3;296(4):961-8.
doi: 10.1006/jmbi.2000.3514.

Nature disfavors sequences of alternating polar and non-polar amino acids: implications for amyloidogenesis

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Nature disfavors sequences of alternating polar and non-polar amino acids: implications for amyloidogenesis

B M Broome et al. J Mol Biol. .

Abstract

Recent experiments with combinatorial libraries of de novo proteins have demonstrated that sequences designed to contain polar and non-polar amino acid residues arranged in an alternating pattern form fibrillar structures resembling beta-amyloid. This finding prompted us to probe the distribution of alternating patterns in the sequences of natural proteins. Analysis of a database of 250,514 protein sequences (79,708,024 residues) for all possible binary patterns of polar and non-polar amino acid residues revealed that alternating patterns occur significantly less often than other patterns with similar compositions. The under-representation of alternating binary patterns in natural protein sequences, coupled with the observation that such patterns promote amyloid-like structures in de novo proteins, suggests that sequences of alternating polar and non-polar amino acids are inherently amyloidogenic and consequently have been disfavored by evolutionary selection.

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