Systematic Analysis and Comparison of Peptide Specificity and Selectivity between Their Cognate Receptors and Noncognate Decoys.
Jianping ShuJuelin LiShaozhou WangJing LinLi WenHaiyang YePeng ZhouPublished in: Journal of molecular recognition : JMR (2022)
Protein-peptide interactions (PpIs) play an important role in cell signaling networks and have been exploited as new and attractive therapeutic targets. The affinity and specificity are two unity-of-opposite aspects of protein-peptide interactions (PpIs) (and other biomolecular interactions); the former indicates the absolute binding strength between the peptide ligand and its cognate protein receptor in a PpI, while the latter represents the relative recognition selectivity of the peptide ligand for its cognate protein receptor in a PpI over those noncognate decoys that could be potentially encountered by the peptide in cell. Although the PpI binding affinity has been widely investigated over the past decades, the peptide recognition specificity (and selectivity) still remains largely unexplored to date. In this study, we classified PpI specificity into three types: (i) class-I specificity: peptide selectivity for its cognate wild-type protein receptor over the noncognate mutant decoys of this receptor, (ii) class-II specificity: peptide selectivity for its cognate protein receptor over other noncognate decoys that are homologous with this receptor, and (iii) class-III specificity: peptide selectivity for its cognate protein receptor over other noncogante decoys that are the cognate receptors of other peptides. We performed affinity and selectivity analysis for the three types of PpI specificity and revealed that the PpIs generally exhibit a moderate or modest specificity; peptide selectivity increases in the order: class-I < class-II < class-III. All the three types of PpI specificity were observed to have no statistically significant correlation with peptide length and hydrophobicity, but the class-I and class-II specificities can be influenced considerably by peptide secondary structures; the high specificity is preferentially associated with ordered structure types as compared to undefined structure types. In addition, the mutation distribution (for class-I specificity), sequence conservation (for class-II specificity) and structural similarity (for class-III specificity) seem also to address effects on peptide selectivity. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.