I wonder why I can't find any database for enzymes composed by multiple proteins as separate entities.
I'll explain better: the OST complex is a multiple-units enzyme composed by 6-7 proteins, like OST4, STT3A or STT3B, RPN1, DAD1, etc... If I look for any of these proteins in Uniprot, I get a nice entry for each: for example, if you look at STT3A you get a lot of informations, including a description that explains that this protein partecipates to the OST complex.
However, if you look for 'OST complex' in uniprot, there is not a separate entity for this multiple-units enzyme... I wonder if you know of a database where complex enzymes are described, or if you have faced this problem before.
well, many multi-protein complexes are well characterized, at least to a level when it is worth annotating them. Think of other complexes that have been characterized in the literature: the ATP synthase, the nucleosomes, etc.. On the OST complex there are ~20 years of literature, including many reviews. In any case, I am not looking at a database that annotates the exact composition of each enzyme, but it will be sufficient to have one that summarizes all the possible hypothesis and experimental evidences on it.
A database would definitely be a Good Thing, agreed.
Maybe because of lack of good quality and comparable data? Although there are some experimental approaches, studying molecular interactions isn't exactly an easy thing. And except maybe for a few special cases, probably also not straightforward to predict.
Maybe because of lack of good quality and comparable data? Although there are some experimental approaches, studying molecular interactions isn't exactly an easy thing. And except maybe for a few special cases, probably also not straightforward to predict. (For example: How do you know that OST contains exactly those proteins, maybe you're missing some, maybe some of those listed are artefactual or only present under certain circumstances?)
Yes. But the relatively well characterised ones are not so many. As they grow in number, you'd expect some database to emerge finally. Maybe we're just not quite there yet.
I don't think so... the majority of the enzymes are composed by multiple proteins, and there is already enough literature to make a database, if someone has the resources.