Literature DB >> 19137613

Simulating protein folding initiation sites using an alpha-carbon-only knowledge-based force field.

Patrick M Buck1, Christopher Bystroff.   

Abstract

Protein folding is a hierarchical process where structure forms locally first, then globally. Some short sequence segments initiate folding through strong structural preferences that are independent of their three-dimensional context in proteins. We have constructed a knowledge-based force field in which the energy functions are conditional on local sequence patterns, as expressed in the hidden Markov model for local structure (HMMSTR). Carbon-alpha force field (CALF) builds sequence specific statistical potentials based on database frequencies for alpha-carbon virtual bond opening and dihedral angles, pair-wise contacts and hydrogen bond donor-acceptor pairs, and simulates folding via Brownian dynamics. We introduce hydrogen bond donor and acceptor potentials as alpha-carbon probability fields that are conditional on the predicted local sequence. Constant temperature simulations were carried out using 27 peptides selected as putative folding initiation sites, each 12 residues in length, representing several different local structure motifs. Each 0.6 micros trajectory was clustered based on structure. Simulation convergence or representativeness was assessed by subdividing trajectories and comparing clusters. For 21 of the 27 sequences, the largest cluster made up more than half of the total trajectory. Of these 21 sequences, 14 had cluster centers that were at most 2.6 A root mean square deviation (RMSD) from their native structure in the corresponding full-length protein. To assess the adequacy of the energy function on nonlocal interactions, 11 full length native structures were relaxed using Brownian dynamics simulations. Equilibrated structures deviated from their native states but retained their overall topology and compactness. A simple potential that folds proteins locally and stabilizes proteins globally may enable a more realistic understanding of hierarchical folding pathways. 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19137613      PMCID: PMC4651004          DOI: 10.1002/prot.22348

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proteins        ISSN: 0887-3585


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