| Literature DB >> 22675232 |
Frank H Zucker1, Hae Young Kim, Ethan A Merritt.
Abstract
The growth of diffracting crystals from purified proteins is often a major bottleneck in determining structures of biological and medical interest. The PROSPERO web server, http://skuld.bmsc.washington.edu/prospero, is intended both to provide a means of organizing the potentially large numbers of experimental characterizations measured from such proteins, and to provide useful guidance for structural biologists who have succeeded in purifying their target protein but have reached an impasse in the difficult and poorly understood process of turning purified protein into well diffracting crystals. These researchers need to decide which of many possible rescue options are worth pursuing, given finite resources. This choice is even more crucial when attempting to solve high-priority but relatively difficult structures of eukaryotic proteins. The site currently uses the HyGX1 predictor, which was trained and validated on protein samples from pathogenic protozoa (eukaryotes) using results from six types of experiment. PROSPERO allows users to store, analyze and display multiple results for each sample, to group samples into projects, and to share results and predictions with collaborators.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22675232 PMCID: PMC3359727 DOI: 10.1107/S002188981201775X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Crystallogr ISSN: 0021-8898 Impact factor: 3.304
Figure 1PROSPERO data organization. The user’s projects tab on the ‘all projects’ page. Users can have several projects, each comprising many samples with sequence and experimental results. Not shown: each sample can have one or more associated sequences and possibly multiple results from each type of experiment.
Figure 2Graphical display of intermediate data analysis. (a) Differential scanning fluorimetry () curve showing fluorescence intensity versus temperature; vertical bars are at transition midpoints () with a thicker bar for the major transition; horizontal bars are at spanning the transition width (FWHM of the slope dF/dT). (b) Size-exclusion chromatography, absorbance in m versus fraction, with superimposed models fitting multiple Gaussian peaks. (c) Dynamic light scattering histogram, plotted as intensity versus hydrodynamic radius.
Figure 3Predicted outcome and suggestions. (a) Average and (b) distribution of outcomes for protein samples with similar properties. Diffraction score: (0) no crystals; (1) no diffraction; (2) worse than 10.00 Å; (3) 10.00–4.01 Å; (4) 4.00–2.81 Å; (5) 2.80–2.01 Å; (6) 2.00 Å or better. (c) Path through the decision tree by which this sample was categorized. (d) Suggestions for further work on difficult targets.