| Literature DB >> 22751672 |
Thomas C Terwilliger1, Randy J Read, Paul D Adams, Axel T Brunger, Pavel V Afonine, Ralf W Grosse-Kunstleve, Li-Wei Hung.
Abstract
An approach is presented for addressing the challenge of model rebuilding after molecular replacement in cases where the placed template is very different from the structure to be determined. The approach takes advantage of the observation that a template and target structure may have local structures that can be superimposed much more closely than can their complete structures. A density-guided procedure for deformation of a properly placed template is introduced. A shift in the coordinates of each residue in the structure is calculated based on optimizing the match of model density within a 6 Å radius of the center of that residue with a prime-and-switch electron-density map. The shifts are smoothed and applied to the atoms in each residue, leading to local deformation of the template that improves the match of map and model. The model is then refined to improve the geometry and the fit of model to the structure-factor data. A new map is then calculated and the process is repeated until convergence. The procedure can extend the routine applicability of automated molecular replacement, model building and refinement to search models with over 2 Å r.m.s.d. representing 65-100% of the structure.Entities:
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Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22751672 PMCID: PMC3388814 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444912015636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Structures used in analysis of morphing
| Structure | Resolution (Å) | Identity (%) | NCS copies | Chain length | Free | Template chain length | Template r.m.s.d. | Template percentile-based spread | Notes | ID in DiMaio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| radA intein | 1.7 | 100 | 2 | 174 | 0.26 | 174 | 2.44 | 1.95 | DiMaio | 12 |
| cab55348 | 1.9 | 31 | 1 | 420 | 0.24 | 354 | 2.10 | 1.75 | DiMaio | 5 |
| XMRV PR | 2.0 | 30 | 2 | 133 | 0.23 | 97 | 2.42 | 2.04 | PDB entry | 6 |
| fk4430 | 2.1 | 22 | 1 | 205 | 0.29 | 132 | 2.39 | 1.44 | DiMaio | 1 |
| thiod | 2.1 | 22/15 | 1 | 248 | 0.26 | 214 | 2.12 | 1.86 | DiMaio | 7 |
| bfr258e | 2.2 | 19 | 2 | 168 | 0.22 | 134 | 1.99 | 1.27 | PDB entry | 2 |
| niko | 2.5 | 27 | 2 | 473 | 0.31 | 415 | 2.37 | 1.89 | DiMaio | 3 |
| estan | 2.5 | 18 | 1 | 372 | 0.25 | 257 | 2.29 | 2.09 | DiMaio | 11 |
| fj6376 | 2.7 | 21 | 4 | 248 | 0.24 | 224 | 2.12 | 2.04 | PDB entry | 4 |
| pc02153 | 2.8 | 29 | 1 | 312 | 0.38 | 287 | 2.25 | 1.80 | DiMaio | 8 |
| pc0265 | 2.9 | 29 | 2 | 343 | 0.23 | 308 | 4.05 | 3.18 | PDB entry | 13 |
| tirap | 3.0 | 22 | 1 | 176 | 0.29 | 141 | 2.61 | 2.37 | DiMaio | 9 |
| hp3342 | 3.2 | 20 | 1 | 369 | 0.26 | 352 | 2.48 | 2.11 | PDB entry | 10 |
The free R value corresponds to deposited refined structures where available (as listed in the Notes column) and based on the available structures with lowest free R value in other cases (taken from DiMaio et al., 2011 ▶). The best available maps used here were 2mF o − DF c maps based on these structures.
Template r.m.s.d. is calculated between main-chain atoms of the template and the nearest main-chain atoms of the final structure used for the free R value and map calculations.
Percentile-based spread (Pozharski, 2010 ▶) is the distance corresponding to the 60.8th percentile of distances between main-chain atoms of the template and final structure.
These structures and the template structures used as starting models are the same as those used in DiMaio et al. (2011 ▶) and are referred to in that work with an ID number instead of a name. The starting model for the radA intein structure was a preliminary NMR model created with an automatic procedure. The starting model for thiod consisted of a Rosetta model for one domain and a molecular-replacement solution for the other. The starting models for the other structures were edited homology models placed in the unit cell either by molecular replacement or by superposition on a molecular-replacement solution as described in DiMaio et al. (2011 ▶).
Separate templates were used to model the two domains of thiod; the template for one domain had a sequence identity of 22% and the other had an identity of 15%.
The pc0265 structure has two domains and the relative positions of these domains differ in the template and the target structure.
The resolution of the data used here for the hp3342 structure was 3.2 Å. This is the same data (non-anomalous data from inflection point) that was used previously (DiMaio et al., 2011 ▶) and that was used in early stages of the recent full determination of this structure (Brunger et al., 2012 ▶).
Figure 1Application of morphing to the cab55348 structure. (a) Cip2 template (Pokkuluri et al., 2011 ▶) in blue; final model of cab55348 in green; prime-and-switch electron-density map based on the template structure in purple. (b) Cip2 template and map as in (a); template after refinement with phenix.refine in orange. (c) Cip2 template and map as in (a); model density calculated from Cip2 template in purple. (d) Cip2 map as in (a); model density calculated from Cip2 template, offset to optimally match map, in purple. (e) Cip2 template and map as in (a); morphed Cip2 model in yellow. (f) Cip2 template, map and morphed Cip2 model as in (e); refined morphed Cip2 model in off-yellow. (g) Refined model after six cycles of morphing in yellow; prime-and-switch map based on model from cycle 5 of morphing in purple. (h) Automatically rebuilt model in green and density-modified electron density map in blue obtained starting from the map and model in (g). Contour levels in all the maps are at 1.5σ except for the model densities in (c) and (d), which are at 3.5σ. Figures were created with Coot (Emsley et al., 2010 ▶) and Raster3D (Merritt & Bacon, 1997 ▶). A full Coot scene with all models and maps is available as supplementary material.
Map correlation to best available maps for various morphing strategies
| Morphing with various maps | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Structure | Refinement | 2 | Density modified | OMIT | Prime-and-switch | Prime-and-switch (repeated) |
| radA intein | 0.299 | 0.826 | 0.866 | 0.861 | 0.853 | 0.876 |
| cab55348 | 0.361 | 0.595 | 0.600 | 0.619 | 0.649 | 0.684 |
| XMRV PR | 0.304 | 0.747 | 0.740 | 0.746 | 0.733 | 0.712 |
| fk4430 | 0.690 | 0.703 | 0.704 | 0.706 | 0.690 | 0.715 |
| thiod | 0.344 | 0.477 | 0.498 | 0.586 | 0.548 | 0.646 |
| bfr258e | 0.667 | 0.685 | 0.700 | 0.691 | 0.702 | 0.708 |
| niko | 0.535 | 0.788 | 0.785 | 0.790 | 0.785 | 0.790 |
| estan | 0.376 | 0.571 | 0.634 | 0.612 | 0.671 | 0.680 |
| fj6376 | 0.637 | 0.764 | 0.769 | 0.763 | 0.761 | 0.769 |
| pc02153 | 0.708 | 0.771 | 0.774 | 0.760 | 0.785 | 0.783 |
| pc0265 | 0.443 | 0.576 | 0.553 | 0.569 | 0.575 | 0.603 |
| tirap | 0.567 | 0.659 | 0.684 | 0.664 | 0.694 | 0.715 |
| hp3342 | 0.479 | 0.571 | 0.597 | 0.596 | 0.645 | 0.658 |
| Mean | 0.493 | 0.672 | 0.685 | 0.690 | 0.699 | 0.718 |
The models from the prime-and-switch map-based morphing were used as the starting point for a second round of morphing using prime-and-switch maps. A single prime-and-switch map was calculated at the beginning of this second round of morphing and was used for the entire round.
Free R values after morphing and autobuilding
| Structure | Autobuild free | Morphing and autobuild free |
|---|---|---|
| radA intein | 0.29 | 0.29 |
|
| 0.41 |
|
| XMRV PR | 0.39 | 0.37 |
| fk4430 | 0.34 | 0.33 |
|
| 0.54 |
|
| bfr258e | 0.28 | 0.27 |
| niko | 0.29 | 0.29 |
|
| 0.54 |
|
| fj6376 | 0.29 | 0.31 |
| pc02153 | 0.48 | 0.49 |
| pc0265 | 0.43 | 0.42 |
| tirap | 0.45 | 0.51 |
| hp3342 | 0.54 | 0.51 |
Morphing using prime-and-switch maps and a total of six cycles, as in Table 2 ▶. Cases in which morphing reduced the free R value by 0.2 units or more are shown in bold.
Map correlation to the best available maps for extensive phenix.refine refinement compared with morphing
| Structure | Refinement (three cycles) | Refinement (100 cycles) | Morphing |
|---|---|---|---|
| radA intein | 0.299 | 0.840 | 0.876 |
| cab55348 | 0.361 | 0.607 |
|
| XMRV PR | 0.304 | 0.717 | 0.712 |
| fk4430 | 0.690 | 0.693 | 0.715 |
| thiod | 0.344 | 0.389 |
|
| bfr258e | 0.667 | 0.678 | 0.708 |
| niko | 0.535 | 0.788 | 0.790 |
| estan | 0.376 | 0.569 |
|
| fj6376 | 0.637 | 0.757 | 0.769 |
| pc02153 | 0.708 | 0.743 | 0.783 |
| pc0265 | 0.443 | 0.611 | 0.603 |
| tirap | 0.567 | 0.648 |
|
| hp3342 | 0.479 | 0.552 |
|
| Mean | 0.493 | 0.661 | 0.718 |
Morphing using prime-and-switch maps and a total of six cycles, as in Table 2 ▶. The cases where morphing improved the correlation compared with 100 cycles of refinement by 0.05 units or more are shown in bold. The CPU time (using 2.9 GHz Intel Xeon processors) required to run 100 cycles of refinement varied from 1 to 5.5 h for these structures (mean of 2.6 h) and the CPU time required to run morphing ranged from 0.5 to 5 h (mean of 2.0 h).
Figure 2Differences between templates, refined and morphed models and the best available models for each structure. For each structure (listed along the x axis), the r.m.s.d. or percentile-based spread between the best available model for that structure and (i) the template, (ii) the template after three cycles of refinement with phenix.refine, (iii) the template after 100 cycles of refinement and (iv) the template after morphing using the prime-and-switch maps and iterating the morphing process for a total of 12 cycles is shown. (a) Differences calculated as r.m.s.d. (b) Differences calculated as percentile-based spread.