Literature DB >> 22183547

Explicit treatment of water molecules in data-driven protein-protein docking: the solvated HADDOCKing approach.

Panagiotis L Kastritis1, Aalt D J van Dijk, Alexandre M J J Bonvin.   

Abstract

Water molecules are active components in, literally, every biochemical event, forming hydrogen bonds, filling cavities, and mediating interactions with other (bio)molecules. Therefore, solvent drastically affects the kinetics and thermodynamics of numerous cellular events, including protein-protein interactions. While docking techniques are becoming successful in predicting the three-dimensional structure of protein-protein complexes, they are still limited in accounting explicitly for water in the binding process. HADDOCK is one of the few programs so far that can explicitly deal with water molecules during docking. Its solvated docking protocol starts from hydrated molecules, and a fraction of the interfacial water is subsequently removed from the docked models in a biased Monte Carlo procedure. The Monte Carlo-based removal is based on interfacial amino acid-water contact propensities derived from a dataset of high-resolution crystal structures of protein-protein complexes. In this chapter, this solvated docking protocol is described and associated methodological aspects are illustrated through an application example. It is shown that, although docking results do not always improve when the solvated docking protocol is applied, scoring is improved and the positions of buried water molecules in an interface are correctly predicted. Therefore, by identifying important water molecules, solvated docking can aid the development of novel inhibitors of protein-protein complexes that might be better accommodated at an interface.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22183547     DOI: 10.1007/978-1-61779-465-0_22

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Methods Mol Biol        ISSN: 1064-3745


  6 in total

1.  Solvated protein-DNA docking using HADDOCK.

Authors:  Marc van Dijk; Koen M Visscher; Panagiotis L Kastritis; Alexandre M J J Bonvin
Journal:  J Biomol NMR       Date:  2013-04-30       Impact factor: 2.835

2.  An Electrostatically-steered Conformational Selection Mechanism Promotes SARS-CoV-2 Spike Protein Variation.

Authors:  Marija Sorokina; Jaydeep Belapure; Christian Tüting; Reinhard Paschke; Ioannis Papasotiriou; João P G L M Rodrigues; Panagiotis L Kastritis
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2022-05-17       Impact factor: 6.151

3.  PlaceWaters: Real-time, explicit interface water sampling during Rosetta ligand docking.

Authors:  Shannon T Smith; Laura Shub; Jens Meiler
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-05-31       Impact factor: 3.752

4.  Molecular mechanism of the chaperone function of mini-α-crystallin, a 19-residue peptide of human α-crystallin.

Authors:  Priya R Banerjee; Ajay Pande; Alexander Shekhtman; Jayanti Pande
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2014-12-26       Impact factor: 3.162

5.  Structural analysis of peptide-analogues of human Zona Pellucida ZP1 protein with amyloidogenic properties: insights into mammalian Zona Pellucida formation.

Authors:  Nikolaos N Louros; Vassiliki A Iconomidou; Polina Giannelou; Stavros J Hamodrakas
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-12       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Mechanisms of amyloid formation revealed by solution NMR.

Authors:  Theodoros K Karamanos; Arnout P Kalverda; Gary S Thompson; Sheena E Radford
Journal:  Prog Nucl Magn Reson Spectrosc       Date:  2015-05-27       Impact factor: 9.795

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.