Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/22823
Title: IN-SILICO CHARACTERIZATION OF HYPOTHETICAL PROTEIN PA3042 FROM PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA: A MULTI-EVIDENCE APPROACH
Authors: GAURAV
Hasija, Yasha (SUPERVISOR)
Keywords: HYPOTHETICAL PROTEIN
PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA
MULTI-EVIDENCE APPROACH
IN-SILICO CHARACTERIZATION
PA3042
Issue Date: May-2026
Series/Report no.: TD-8750;
Abstract: Antimicrobial resistance is a worldwide health concern and motivates efforts to discover and characterize bacterial proteins that mediate pathogenicity and stress adaptation. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a very adaptable opportunistic pathogen known for intrinsic resistance to antibiotics, capacity for persistent biofilm formation, and survival across diverse environments through coordinated regulatory networks such as quorum sensing and several other signaling systems. Despite extensive research into these major pathways, a substantial fraction of P. aeruginosa proteins remains functionally uncharacterized. In this study, an in-silico characterization of the hypothetical protein PA3042 was carried out to predict its structural and functional properties and determine its potential role in signaling-associated processes. A comprehensive suite of bioinformatics approaches was applied, including physicochemical profiling to evaluate stability and solubility parameters, subcellular localization prediction to infer membrane association, secondary and tertiary structure modelling to generate three-dimensional models, and rigorous structural validation to assess model quality. Conserved domain searches and functional annotation methods were used to identify motifs and putative activities, while binding pocket prediction and molecular docking provided insights into possible ligand interactions. Comparative structural analysis and evolutionary conservation mapping were performed to highlight residues likely to be functionally important and to place PA3042 within a broader evolutionary context. The collective computational evidence indicates that PA3042 is likely a membrane associated regulatory protein that may participate in bacterial adaptation and signaling iv processes relevant to virulence and stress response. These findings offer preliminary structural and functional insights into PA3042 and refine our understanding of the PA3040–PA3042 operon. By generating specific hypotheses about localization, functional motifs, and potential ligand interactions, this work establishes a targeted framework for biochemical and genetic experiments to validate the predicted roles of PA3042 and to explore its contribution to P. aeruginosa biology.
URI: http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/22823
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