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Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments

As modeling of changes in backbone conformation still lacks a computationally efficient solution, we developed a discretisation of the conformational states accessible to the protein backbone similar to the successful rotamer approach in side chains. The BriX fragment database, consisting of fragmen...

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Autores principales: Baeten, Lies, Reumers, Joke, Tur, Vicente, Stricher, François, Lenaerts, Tom, Serrano, Luis, Rousseau, Frederic, Schymkowitz, Joost
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2367438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18483555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000083
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author Baeten, Lies
Reumers, Joke
Tur, Vicente
Stricher, François
Lenaerts, Tom
Serrano, Luis
Rousseau, Frederic
Schymkowitz, Joost
author_facet Baeten, Lies
Reumers, Joke
Tur, Vicente
Stricher, François
Lenaerts, Tom
Serrano, Luis
Rousseau, Frederic
Schymkowitz, Joost
author_sort Baeten, Lies
collection PubMed
description As modeling of changes in backbone conformation still lacks a computationally efficient solution, we developed a discretisation of the conformational states accessible to the protein backbone similar to the successful rotamer approach in side chains. The BriX fragment database, consisting of fragments from 4 to 14 residues long, was realized through identification of recurrent backbone fragments from a non-redundant set of high-resolution protein structures. BriX contains an alphabet of more than 1,000 frequently observed conformations per peptide length for 6 different variation levels. Analysis of the performance of BriX revealed an average structural coverage of protein structures of more than 99% within a root mean square distance (RMSD) of 1 Angstrom. Globally, we are able to reconstruct protein structures with an average accuracy of 0.48 Angstrom RMSD. As expected, regular structures are well covered, but, interestingly, many loop regions that appear irregular at first glance are also found to form a recurrent structural motif, albeit with lower frequency of occurrence than regular secondary structures. Larger loop regions could be completely reconstructed from smaller recurrent elements, between 4 and 8 residues long. Finally, we observed that a significant amount of short sequences tend to display strong structural ambiguity between alpha helix and extended conformations. When the sequence length increases, this so-called sequence plasticity is no longer observed, illustrating the context dependency of polypeptide structures.
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spelling pubmed-23674382008-05-16 Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments Baeten, Lies Reumers, Joke Tur, Vicente Stricher, François Lenaerts, Tom Serrano, Luis Rousseau, Frederic Schymkowitz, Joost PLoS Comput Biol Research Article As modeling of changes in backbone conformation still lacks a computationally efficient solution, we developed a discretisation of the conformational states accessible to the protein backbone similar to the successful rotamer approach in side chains. The BriX fragment database, consisting of fragments from 4 to 14 residues long, was realized through identification of recurrent backbone fragments from a non-redundant set of high-resolution protein structures. BriX contains an alphabet of more than 1,000 frequently observed conformations per peptide length for 6 different variation levels. Analysis of the performance of BriX revealed an average structural coverage of protein structures of more than 99% within a root mean square distance (RMSD) of 1 Angstrom. Globally, we are able to reconstruct protein structures with an average accuracy of 0.48 Angstrom RMSD. As expected, regular structures are well covered, but, interestingly, many loop regions that appear irregular at first glance are also found to form a recurrent structural motif, albeit with lower frequency of occurrence than regular secondary structures. Larger loop regions could be completely reconstructed from smaller recurrent elements, between 4 and 8 residues long. Finally, we observed that a significant amount of short sequences tend to display strong structural ambiguity between alpha helix and extended conformations. When the sequence length increases, this so-called sequence plasticity is no longer observed, illustrating the context dependency of polypeptide structures. Public Library of Science 2008-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2367438/ /pubmed/18483555 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000083 Text en Baeten et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Baeten, Lies
Reumers, Joke
Tur, Vicente
Stricher, François
Lenaerts, Tom
Serrano, Luis
Rousseau, Frederic
Schymkowitz, Joost
Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments
title Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments
title_full Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments
title_fullStr Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments
title_full_unstemmed Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments
title_short Reconstruction of Protein Backbones from the BriX Collection of Canonical Protein Fragments
title_sort reconstruction of protein backbones from the brix collection of canonical protein fragments
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2367438/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18483555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000083
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