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A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking

Protein-peptide interactions are vital for the cell. They mediate, inhibit or serve as structural components in nearly 40% of all macromolecular interactions, and are often associated with diseases, making them interesting leads for protein drug design. In recent years, large-scale technologies have...

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Autores principales: Trellet, Mikael, Melquiond, Adrien S. J., Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3596317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23516555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058769
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author Trellet, Mikael
Melquiond, Adrien S. J.
Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J.
author_facet Trellet, Mikael
Melquiond, Adrien S. J.
Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J.
author_sort Trellet, Mikael
collection PubMed
description Protein-peptide interactions are vital for the cell. They mediate, inhibit or serve as structural components in nearly 40% of all macromolecular interactions, and are often associated with diseases, making them interesting leads for protein drug design. In recent years, large-scale technologies have enabled exhaustive studies on the peptide recognition preferences for a number of peptide-binding domain families. Yet, the paucity of data regarding their molecular binding mechanisms together with their inherent flexibility makes the structural prediction of protein-peptide interactions very challenging. This leaves flexible docking as one of the few amenable computational techniques to model these complexes. We present here an ensemble, flexible protein-peptide docking protocol that combines conformational selection and induced fit mechanisms. Starting from an ensemble of three peptide conformations (extended, a-helix, polyproline-II), flexible docking with HADDOCK generates 79.4% of high quality models for bound/unbound and 69.4% for unbound/unbound docking when tested against the largest protein-peptide complexes benchmark dataset available to date. Conformational selection at the rigid-body docking stage successfully recovers the most relevant conformation for a given protein-peptide complex and the subsequent flexible refinement further improves the interface by up to 4.5 Å interface RMSD. Cluster-based scoring of the models results in a selection of near-native solutions in the top three for ∼75% of the successfully predicted cases. This unified conformational selection and induced fit approach to protein-peptide docking should open the route to the modeling of challenging systems such as disorder-order transitions taking place upon binding, significantly expanding the applicability limit of biomolecular interaction modeling by docking.
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spelling pubmed-35963172013-03-20 A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking Trellet, Mikael Melquiond, Adrien S. J. Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J. PLoS One Research Article Protein-peptide interactions are vital for the cell. They mediate, inhibit or serve as structural components in nearly 40% of all macromolecular interactions, and are often associated with diseases, making them interesting leads for protein drug design. In recent years, large-scale technologies have enabled exhaustive studies on the peptide recognition preferences for a number of peptide-binding domain families. Yet, the paucity of data regarding their molecular binding mechanisms together with their inherent flexibility makes the structural prediction of protein-peptide interactions very challenging. This leaves flexible docking as one of the few amenable computational techniques to model these complexes. We present here an ensemble, flexible protein-peptide docking protocol that combines conformational selection and induced fit mechanisms. Starting from an ensemble of three peptide conformations (extended, a-helix, polyproline-II), flexible docking with HADDOCK generates 79.4% of high quality models for bound/unbound and 69.4% for unbound/unbound docking when tested against the largest protein-peptide complexes benchmark dataset available to date. Conformational selection at the rigid-body docking stage successfully recovers the most relevant conformation for a given protein-peptide complex and the subsequent flexible refinement further improves the interface by up to 4.5 Å interface RMSD. Cluster-based scoring of the models results in a selection of near-native solutions in the top three for ∼75% of the successfully predicted cases. This unified conformational selection and induced fit approach to protein-peptide docking should open the route to the modeling of challenging systems such as disorder-order transitions taking place upon binding, significantly expanding the applicability limit of biomolecular interaction modeling by docking. Public Library of Science 2013-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3596317/ /pubmed/23516555 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058769 Text en © 2013 Trellet 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
Trellet, Mikael
Melquiond, Adrien S. J.
Bonvin, Alexandre M. J. J.
A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking
title A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking
title_full A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking
title_fullStr A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking
title_full_unstemmed A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking
title_short A Unified Conformational Selection and Induced Fit Approach to Protein-Peptide Docking
title_sort unified conformational selection and induced fit approach to protein-peptide docking
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3596317/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23516555
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058769
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