Publications by authors named "Yehoshua Sobolevsky"

Twenty-seven protein sequence elements, six to nine amino acids long, were extracted from 15 phylogenetically diverse complete prokaryotic proteomes. The elements are present in all of these proteomes, with at least one copy each (omnipresent elements), and have presumably been conserved since the last universal common ancestor (LUCA). All these omnipresent elements are identified in crystallized protein structures as parts of highly conserved closed loops, 25-30 residues long, thus representing the closed-loop modules discovered in 2000 by Berezovsky et al.

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Evolution of the triplet code is reconstructed on the basis of consensus temporal order of appearance of amino acids. Several important predictions are confirmed by computational sequence analyses. The earliest amino acids, alanine and glycine, have been encoded by GCC and GGC codons, as today.

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Universal scale of the sequence conservation has been recently introduced based on omnipresence of the protein sequence motifs across species. A large spectrum of short sequences, up to eight residues has been found to reside in all or almost all prokaryotic organisms. By this discovery a principally novel quantitative approach is introduced to the problem of reconstruction of the last universal common ancestor (LUCA).

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A full repertoire of octapeptides which are present in at least 30 bacterial proteomes of total 131 currently available is computationally derived and filtered. An original search technique is used that, in terms of computational time and memory, is similar to the Suffix tree method. The presence of a given sequence in a large number of proteomes qualifies it as a conserved sequence.

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