16 research outputs found
Association Rate Constants of Ras-Effector Interactions Are Evolutionarily Conserved
Evolutionary conservation of protein interaction properties has been shown to be a valuable indication for functional importance. Here we use homology interface modeling of 10 Ras-effector complexes by selecting ortholog proteins from 12 organisms representing the major eukaryotic branches, except plants. We find that with increasing divergence time the sequence similarity decreases with respect to the human protein, but the affinities and association rate constants are conserved as predicted by the protein design algorithm, FoldX. In parallel we have done computer simulations on a minimal network based on Ras-effector interactions, and our results indicate that in the absence of negative feedback, changes in kinetics that result in similar binding constants have strong consequences on network behavior. This, together with the previous results, suggests an important biological role, not only for equilibrium binding constants but also for kinetics in signaling processes involving Ras-effector interactions. Our findings are important to take into consideration in system biology approaches and simulations of biological networks
3D-Reconstruction of Faces: Combining Stereo with Class-based Knowledge
The recovery of the threedimensional structure of faces with conventional stereo methods still proves difficult. In this paper we introduce a higher order constraint based on linear object classes, which supplies a standard stereo algorithm with prior knowledge of the general structure of faces. This constraint has been learned by exploiting the similarities between 200 faces in a database and is represented in a morphable face model