Blue copper proteins are type-I copper-containing
redox proteins whose role is to shuttle electrons from
an electron donor to an electron acceptor in bacteria and
plants. A large amount of experimental data is available
on blue copper proteins; however, their functional characterization
is hindered by the complexity of redox processes in biological
systems. We describe here the application of a semiquantitative
method based on a comparative analysis of molecular interaction
fields to gain insights into the recognition properties of blue
copper proteins. Molecular electrostatic and hydrophobic potentials
were computed and compared for a set of 33 experimentally-determined
structures of proteins from seven blue copper subfamilies,
and the results were quantified by means of similarity
indices. The analysis provides a classification of the
blue copper proteins and shows that (1) comparison of the
molecular electrostatic potentials provides useful information
complementary to that highlighted by sequence analysis;
(2) similarities in recognition properties can be detected
for proteins belonging to different subfamilies, such as
amicyanins and pseudoazurins, that may be isofunctional
proteins; (3) dissimilarities in interaction properties,
consistent with experimentally different binding specificities,
may be observed between proteins belonging to the same
subfamily, such as cyanobacterial and eukaryotic plastocyanins;
(4) proteins with low sequence identity, such as azurins
and pseudoazurins, can have sufficient similarity to bind
to similar electron donors and acceptors while having different
binding specificity profiles.