Feb
27
2009
0

Outcome of a workshop on applications of protein models in biomedical research.

The Outcome of a workshop on applications of protein models in biomedical research. review summarizes a recent meeting (meeting website) held at UCSF. The case studies in this review may serve as an excellent resource for researchers that need to demonstrate the applicability and utility of macromolecular modeling for advancing experimental studies. In the author list from the Rosetta Commons were Tanja Kortemme and Rhiju Das. The author list is also a great resource for those that are new to the field and would like to familiarize themselves with some of the major figures.
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Feb
25
2009
3

Molecules on the go – iPhone app.

How many times have you talked to someone at a conference, or in a meeting and tried to explain to him, while hand waiving or napkin drawing, that cool structural feature of your protein? Well, with “Molecules” the hand waving can stop and the finger waving begins.

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Written by Nir London in: Resources | Tags: , , , ,
Feb
22
2009
0

Bi-Weekly Digest 22/02/09

In this Bi-weekly digest, a large scale structural analysis of the human tyrosine phosphatome, a Fas-death domain complex structure, and at least two works concerning calmodulin… 

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Feb
18
2009
0

Protein structure initiative – Biologists wanted.

The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), has announced a new direction for the Protein Structure Initiative, – PSI:Biology. The program will support research partnerships between groups of biologists and high-throughput structure determination centers to solve problems of biomedical importance.

PSI:Biology will include eight components. Beginning in April 2009, NIGMS plans to release requests for applications for the following five components, which will be awarded beginning in July 2010 with an estimated fiscal year 2010 total budget of $37 million or more.
  • High-throughput structure determination centers that will devote most of their efforts to solving community-nominated sets of protein structures.
  • Consortia of scientists that will work with the structure determination centers to solve biological problems that require the solution of many protein structures.
  • Centers focused on determining membrane protein structures of great biological interest.
  • The PSI-SG Knowledgebase.
  • The PSI-SG Materials Repository.

To continue the PSI emphasis on method and technology development NIGMS also plans to issue program announcements awards to support:

  • Technology development for structure determination,
  • New methods for protein modeling, and
  • Additional partnerships with members of the broader community.

To date, PSI-supported researchers have generated more than 3,500 structures, many revealing novel patterns of folding, reported in more than 1,200 research papers.

The PSI has received notable criticism (e.g. “An idea whose time has gone”) from the structural biology community at its starting days, with the main complaint being that this mass of structural data isn’t useful to biologists. Will this new initiative help them calm down ?

Written by Nir London in: News | Tags: , , ,
Feb
15
2009
0

Ab-initio Prediction of Membrane Protein Structures Using Constraints

It has become popular to say that ab-initio prediction of protein structure is now unnecessary since the “Fold space” is nearly covered and thus there is a representative, homologous solved structure, for every protein. Therefore, limiting the structure prediction problem to homology modeling. However, this is certainly not the case for membrane proteins.

Experimental determination of high-resolution membrane protein structures remains very difficult. The fact that membrane proteins are typically longer than 200 aa does not make the problem easier. Membrane proteins can be classified into 2 groups: transmembrane helical (TMH) bundles and beta-barrels. For TMH proteins, the physical constraints imposed by the anisotropic environment of the lipid bilayer lead to characteristic distributions of amino acids that depend on their depth in the membrane. These observations have enabled the development of topology prediction schemes that have become quite sophisticated and powerful. 

Barth, Wallner and Baker, describe a method for predicting the structures of large helical membrane proteins by adding constraints regarding helix–helix packing arrangements at particular positions predicted from sequence or identified by experiments.

The authors expend the technique developed for sampling nonlocal beta-sheet topologies to fold membrane proteins from sequence. In this scheme, the relative orientation of TMH pairs is fixed at two particular positions during folding by long-range pair wise constraints. For each constraint between two helices, a ‘‘fold tree’’ is constructed for the polypeptide chain in which two C-alpha positions from the two helices are connected and fixed in space during folding. To allow for this non-local connection in the tree, the peptide chain is cut elsewhere between the two connected positions. The cut is randomly selected within predicted loop regions of the proteins with a bias toward long loops. This avoids disrupting subdomains composed of few TMHs connected by short loops, which can be folded properly. 

To predict those structural constraints from sequence information, a database of  TMHs configurations from TMH pairs of known structures was assembled. This database of interacting TMH pairs is searched for local sequence matches with all possible pairs of predicted TMHs in the query sequence using a sliding window. In each folding trajectory, a single randomly selected predicted interaction in the library is used to constrain a particular helix pair to the helix–helix arrangement. Ten predicted interactions are included for each helix pair, which allows correct models to be generated despite the low overall accuracy of the interaction library since only one of the 10 is requiered to be correct.

The method was tested on 12 membrane proteins of diverse topologies and functions with lengths ranging between 190 and 300 residues. Enforcing a single constraint during the folding simulations enriched the population of near-native models for 9 proteins over the predictions made with the older generation of RosettaMembrane. In 4 of the cases in which the constraint was predicted from the sequence, 1 of the 5 lowest energy models was superimposable within 4 Å on the native structure. Near-native structures could also be selected for heme-binding and pore-forming domains from simulations in which pairs of conserved histidine-chelating hemes and one experimentally determined salt bridge were constrained, respectively. In 8 out of the 12 cases a model was sampled in which more than 85% of the sequence was superimposable onto the native structure and in 5 cases this was true for one of the 5 lowest energy models.

P. Barth, B. Wallner, D. Baker (2009). Prediction of membrane protein structures with complex topologies using limited constraints Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106 (5), 1409-1414 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0808323106


Feb
06
2009
0

A periodic table of coiled-coil protein structures.

Coiled coils (CC) are protein structural domains made out of alpha-helices packed together through tight packing of side-chains also known as knob-into-hole packing. We usually think of coiled-coils as a pair of intertwined alpha-helices, however, Moutevelis E & Woolfson DN performed a systematic analysis and classification of coiled-coil structures in the PDB, and entail a more complex story. This analysis is summarized in the “periodic table of coiled-coils“.

Periodic table of coiled-coil structure

Periodic table of coiled-coil structure - adapted from: http://coiledcoils.chm.bris.ac.uk/ccplus/search/

As it turns, dimeric coiled coils only populate 73.8% of all found CC architectures, whereas the other 26% are more complex. The columns of the table represent the number of helices participating in the CC motif, while the rows of the table represent the complexity of relationship between these motifs.

The analysis identified some CC architechtures that have not been assigned as such before, but more importantly, the table and these new classes of coiled-coil assemblies highlight the structural space currently occupied by coiled-coils and possibly predict viable assemblies yet to be seen.

E MOUTEVELIS, D WOOLFSON (2009). A Periodic Table of Coiled-Coil Protein Structures Journal of Molecular Biology, 385 (3), 726-732 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2008.11.028


Feb
04
2009
0

3DSIG 2009 – Structural Bioinformatics and Computational Biophysics

An ISMB satellite meeting. Stockholm, June 27-28 2009.

3Dsig has established itself as a main event in the field of structural bioinformatics and computational biophysics since 2004. Amongst this year’s confirmed keynote speakers are Michael Levitt and Gunnar von Heijne. This is a unique event bringing together in one place the structural computational biology community. The program will be built around talks from accepted abstracts and invited speakers.

Keydates:

  • February 16, 2009 – Registration opens for 3Dsig and ISMB/ECCB. 
  • March 18, 2009 – Deadline for submitting an abstract to 3Dsig to be considered for oral presentation.
  • April 2, 2009 – Deadline for travel fellowship application for the main ISMB/ECCB conference.


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