“…Residues that are invariant among the widely divergent branches of evolution are expected to have a larger functional impact than other residues that vary among closely related species (Lichtarge et al, 1996). The distribution of evolutionarily important residues is far from random when mapped onto the protein structure (Lichtarge et al, 1996; Baranski et al, 1999; Madabushi et al, 2002), forming clusters that overlap with known functional sites (Madabushi et al, 2002; Baameur et al, 2010; Lichtarge et al, 2003; Yao et al, 2003; Sowa et al, 2000; Onrust et al, 1997; Chiba et al, 2006; Madabushi et al, 2004; Wilkins et al, 2013; Wilkins et al, 2010) from which one may then automatically extract 3D motifs useful for transferring functional annotation between proteins on the scale of the entire structural proteome (Venner et al, 2010; Amin et al, 2013; Erdin et al, 2013). These 3D motifs consists of five or six residues identified by ET, they do not rely on prior knowledge of the molecular basis of any function, and a recent study shows that they can be accurate enough for bona fide prediction of both catalytic activity and substrates (Amin et al, 2013).…”