Counting the Zinc-Proteins Encoded in the Human Genome
University of Florence · Interuniversity Consortium for Magnetic Resonance
Abstract
Metalloproteins are proteins capable of binding one or more metal ions, which may be required for their biological function, or for regulation of their activities or for structural purposes. Genome sequencing projects have provided a huge number of protein primary sequences, but, even though several different elaborate analyses and annotations have been enabled by a rich and ever-increasing portfolio of bioinformatic tools, metal-binding properties remain difficult to predict as well as to investigate experimentally. Consequently, the present knowledge about metalloproteins is only partial. The present bioinformatic research proposes a strategy to answer the question of how many and which proteins encoded in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
4- CAClaudia AndreiniCorresponding
University of Florence, Interuniversity Consortium for Magnetic Resonance
- LBLucia Banci
Interuniversity Consortium for Magnetic Resonance, University of Florence
- IBIvano Bertini
Interuniversity Consortium for Magnetic Resonance, University of Florence
- ARAntonio Rosato
University of Florence, Interuniversity Consortium for Magnetic Resonance
Topics & keywords
- Proteome
- Human proteome project
- Computational biology
- Metalloprotein
- Genome
- Function (biology)
- Human genome
- Zinc