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1.
Mol Cell ; 34(2): 234-49, 2009 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19394300

ABSTRACT

Structures of intact receptors with single-pass transmembrane domains are essential to understand how extracellular and cytoplasmic domains regulate association and signaling through transmembrane domains. A chemical and computational method to determine structures of the membrane regions of such receptors on the cell surface is developed here and validated with glycophorin A. An integrin heterodimer structure reveals association over most of the lengths of the alpha and beta transmembrane domains and shows that the principles governing association of hetero and homo transmembrane dimers differ. A turn at the Gly of the juxtamembrane GFFKR motif caps the alpha TM helix and brings the two Phe of GFFKR into the alpha/beta interface. A juxtamembrane Lys residue in beta also has an important role in the interface. The structure shows how transmembrane association/dissociation regulates integrin signaling. A joint ectodomain and membrane structure shows that substantial flexibility between the extracellular and TM domains is compatible with TM signaling.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Platelet Glycoprotein GPIIb-IIIa Complex/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Platelet Glycoprotein GPIIb-IIIa Complex/metabolism , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Signal Transduction
2.
Proteins ; 62(4): 1010-25, 2006 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16372357

ABSTRACT

We describe the adaptation of the Rosetta de novo structure prediction method for prediction of helical transmembrane protein structures. The membrane environment is modeled by embedding the protein chain into a model membrane represented by parallel planes defining hydrophobic, interface, and polar membrane layers for each energy evaluation. The optimal embedding is determined by maximizing the exposure of surface hydrophobic residues within the membrane and minimizing hydrophobic exposure outside of the membrane. Protein conformations are built up using the Rosetta fragment assembly method and evaluated using a new membrane-specific version of the Rosetta low-resolution energy function in which residue-residue and residue-environment interactions are functions of the membrane layer in addition to amino acid identity, distance, and density. We find that lower energy and more native-like structures are achieved by sequential addition of helices to a growing chain, which may mimic some aspects of helical protein biogenesis after translocation, rather than folding the whole chain simultaneously as in the Rosetta soluble protein prediction method. In tests on 12 membrane proteins for which the structure is known, between 51 and 145 residues were predicted with root-mean-square deviation <4 A from the native structure.


Subject(s)
Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Enzymes/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Models, Theoretical , Protein Binding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Solubility , Solutions , Succinate Dehydrogenase/chemistry , Water
3.
Proteins ; 61 Suppl 7: 128-134, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16187354

ABSTRACT

We describe Rosetta predictions in the Sixth Community-Wide Experiment on the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP), focusing on the free modeling category. Methods developed since CASP5 are described, and their application to selected targets is discussed. Highlights include improved performance on larger proteins (100-200 residues) and the prediction of a 70-residue alpha-beta protein to near-atomic resolution.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Proteomics/methods , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Databases, Protein , Models, Molecular , Models, Theoretical , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Reproducibility of Results , Sequence Alignment , Software
4.
Proteins ; 61 Suppl 7: 157-166, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16187358

ABSTRACT

The Robetta server and revised automatic protocols were used to predict structures for CASP6 targets. Robetta is a publicly available protein structure prediction server (http://robetta.bakerlab.org/ that uses the Rosetta de novo and homology modeling structure prediction methods. We incorporated some of the lessons learned in the CASP5 experiment into the server prior to participating in CASP6. We additionally tested new ideas that were amenable to full-automation with an eye toward improving the server. We find that the Robetta server shows the greatest promise for the more challenging targets. The most significant finding from CASP5, that automated protocols can be roughly comparable in ability with the better human-intervention predictors, is repeated here in CASP6.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Proteomics/methods , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Computers , Data Interpretation, Statistical , Databases, Protein , Dimerization , Models, Molecular , Monte Carlo Method , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Reproducibility of Results , Sequence Alignment , Software
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 100(22): 12678-82, 2003 Oct 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14569019

ABSTRACT

Proteins are complex molecules, yet their folding kinetics is often fast (microseconds) and simple, involving only a single exponential function of time (called two-state kinetics). The main model for two-state kinetics has been transition-state theory, where an energy barrier defines a slow step to reach an improbable structure. But how can barriers explain fast processes, such as folding? We study a simple model with rigorous kinetics that explains the high speed instead as a result of the microscopic parallelization of folding trajectories. The single exponential results from a separation of timescales; the parallelization of routes is high at the start of folding and low thereafter. The ensemble of rate-limiting chain conformations is different from in transition-state theory; it is broad, overlaps with the denatured state, is not aligned along a single reaction coordinate, and involves well populated, rather than improbable, structures.


Subject(s)
Protein Folding , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/metabolism , Kinetics , Protein Conformation , Protein Denaturation
6.
Proteins ; 53 Suppl 6: 457-68, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14579334

ABSTRACT

We describe predictions of the structures of CASP5 targets using Rosetta. The Rosetta fragment insertion protocol was used to generate models for entire target domains without detectable sequence similarity to a protein of known structure and to build long loop insertions (and N-and C-terminal extensions) in cases where a structural template was available. Encouraging results were obtained both for the de novo predictions and for the long loop insertions; we describe here the successes as well as the failures in the context of current efforts to improve the Rosetta method. In particular, de novo predictions failed for large proteins that were incorrectly parsed into domains and for topologically complex (high contact order) proteins with swapping of segments between domains. However, for the remaining targets, at least one of the five submitted models had a long fragment with significant similarity to the native structure. A fully automated version of the CASP5 protocol produced results that were comparable to the human-assisted predictions for most of the targets, suggesting that automated genomic-scale, de novo protein structure prediction may soon be worthwhile. For the three targets where the human-assisted predictions were significantly closer to the native structure, we identify the steps that remain to be automated.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Protein Conformation , Proteins/chemistry , Algorithms , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Computational Biology/trends , Ferredoxins/chemistry , Methyltransferases/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Reproducibility of Results
7.
Curr Opin Struct Biol ; 12(3): 348-54, 2002 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12127454

ABSTRACT

Central issues concerning protein structure prediction have been highlighted by the recently published summary of the fourth community-wide protein structure prediction experiment (CASP4). Although sequence/structure alignment remains the bottleneck in comparative modeling, there has been substantial progress in fully automated remote homolog detection and in de novo structure prediction. Significant further progress will probably require improvements in high-resolution modeling.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Analysis, Protein/trends
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