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Large oligomeric complex structures can be computationally assembled by efficiently combining docked interfaces.

Authors :
Dietzen M
Kalinina OV
Taškova K
Kneissl B
Hildebrandt AK
Jaenicke E
Decker H
Lengauer T
Hildebrandt A
Source :
Proteins [Proteins] 2015 Oct; Vol. 83 (10), pp. 1887-99. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Aug 24.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Macromolecular oligomeric assemblies are involved in many biochemical processes of living organisms. The benefits of such assemblies in crowded cellular environments include increased reaction rates, efficient feedback regulation, cooperativity and protective functions. However, an atom-level structural determination of large assemblies is challenging due to the size of the complex and the difference in binding affinities of the involved proteins. In this study, we propose a novel combinatorial greedy algorithm for assembling large oligomeric complexes from information on the approximate position of interaction interfaces of pairs of monomers in the complex. Prior information on complex symmetry is not required but rather the symmetry is inferred during assembly. We implement an efficient geometric score, the transformation match score, that bypasses the model ranking problems of state-of-the-art scoring functions by scoring the similarity between the inferred dimers of the same monomer simultaneously with different binding partners in a (sub)complex with a set of pregenerated docking poses. We compiled a diverse benchmark set of 308 homo and heteromeric complexes containing 6 to 60 monomers. To explore the applicability of the method, we considered 48 sets of parameters and selected those three sets of parameters, for which the algorithm can correctly reconstruct the maximum number, namely 252 complexes (81.8%) in, at least one of the respective three runs. The crossvalidation coverage, that is, the mean fraction of correctly reconstructed benchmark complexes during crossvalidation, was 78.1%, which demonstrates the ability of the presented method to correctly reconstruct topology of a large variety of biological complexes.<br /> (© 2015 The Authors. Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0134
Volume :
83
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Proteins
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26248608
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/prot.24873