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DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models

The state-of-the-art to assess the structural quality of docking models is currently based on three related yet independent quality measures: F(nat), LRMS, and iRMS as proposed and standardized by CAPRI. These quality measures quantify different aspects of the quality of a particular docking model a...

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Autores principales: Basu, Sankar, Wallner, Björn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4999177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27560519
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161879
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author Basu, Sankar
Wallner, Björn
author_facet Basu, Sankar
Wallner, Björn
author_sort Basu, Sankar
collection PubMed
description The state-of-the-art to assess the structural quality of docking models is currently based on three related yet independent quality measures: F(nat), LRMS, and iRMS as proposed and standardized by CAPRI. These quality measures quantify different aspects of the quality of a particular docking model and need to be viewed together to reveal the true quality, e.g. a model with relatively poor LRMS (>10Å) might still qualify as 'acceptable' with a descent F(nat) (>0.50) and iRMS (<3.0Å). This is also the reason why the so called CAPRI criteria for assessing the quality of docking models is defined by applying various ad-hoc cutoffs on these measures to classify a docking model into the four classes: Incorrect, Acceptable, Medium, or High quality. This classification has been useful in CAPRI, but since models are grouped in only four bins it is also rather limiting, making it difficult to rank models, correlate with scoring functions or use it as target function in machine learning algorithms. Here, we present DockQ, a continuous protein-protein docking model quality measure derived by combining F(nat), LRMS, and iRMS to a single score in the range [0, 1] that can be used to assess the quality of protein docking models. By using DockQ on CAPRI models it is possible to almost completely reproduce the original CAPRI classification into Incorrect, Acceptable, Medium and High quality. An average PPV of 94% at 90% Recall demonstrating that there is no need to apply predefined ad-hoc cutoffs to classify docking models. Since DockQ recapitulates the CAPRI classification almost perfectly, it can be viewed as a higher resolution version of the CAPRI classification, making it possible to estimate model quality in a more quantitative way using Z-scores or sum of top ranked models, which has been so valuable for the CASP community. The possibility to directly correlate a quality measure to a scoring function has been crucial for the development of scoring functions for protein structure prediction, and DockQ should be useful in a similar development in the protein docking field. DockQ is available at http://github.com/bjornwallner/DockQ/
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spelling pubmed-49991772016-09-12 DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models Basu, Sankar Wallner, Björn PLoS One Research Article The state-of-the-art to assess the structural quality of docking models is currently based on three related yet independent quality measures: F(nat), LRMS, and iRMS as proposed and standardized by CAPRI. These quality measures quantify different aspects of the quality of a particular docking model and need to be viewed together to reveal the true quality, e.g. a model with relatively poor LRMS (>10Å) might still qualify as 'acceptable' with a descent F(nat) (>0.50) and iRMS (<3.0Å). This is also the reason why the so called CAPRI criteria for assessing the quality of docking models is defined by applying various ad-hoc cutoffs on these measures to classify a docking model into the four classes: Incorrect, Acceptable, Medium, or High quality. This classification has been useful in CAPRI, but since models are grouped in only four bins it is also rather limiting, making it difficult to rank models, correlate with scoring functions or use it as target function in machine learning algorithms. Here, we present DockQ, a continuous protein-protein docking model quality measure derived by combining F(nat), LRMS, and iRMS to a single score in the range [0, 1] that can be used to assess the quality of protein docking models. By using DockQ on CAPRI models it is possible to almost completely reproduce the original CAPRI classification into Incorrect, Acceptable, Medium and High quality. An average PPV of 94% at 90% Recall demonstrating that there is no need to apply predefined ad-hoc cutoffs to classify docking models. Since DockQ recapitulates the CAPRI classification almost perfectly, it can be viewed as a higher resolution version of the CAPRI classification, making it possible to estimate model quality in a more quantitative way using Z-scores or sum of top ranked models, which has been so valuable for the CASP community. The possibility to directly correlate a quality measure to a scoring function has been crucial for the development of scoring functions for protein structure prediction, and DockQ should be useful in a similar development in the protein docking field. DockQ is available at http://github.com/bjornwallner/DockQ/ Public Library of Science 2016-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4999177/ /pubmed/27560519 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161879 Text en © 2016 Basu, Wallner http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Basu, Sankar
Wallner, Björn
DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models
title DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models
title_full DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models
title_fullStr DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models
title_full_unstemmed DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models
title_short DockQ: A Quality Measure for Protein-Protein Docking Models
title_sort dockq: a quality measure for protein-protein docking models
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4999177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27560519
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161879
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