| Literature DB >> 27145875 |
Boon Chong Goh1,2, Jodi A Hadden1,3, Rafael C Bernardi1,3, Abhishek Singharoy1, Ryan McGreevy1, Till Rudack1, C Keith Cassidy1,2, Klaus Schulten1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
The rise of the computer as a powerful tool for model building and refinement has revolutionized the field of structure determination for large biomolecular systems. Despite the wide availability of robust experimental methods capable of resolving structural details across a range of spatiotemporal resolutions, computational hybrid methods have the unique ability to integrate the diverse data from multimodal techniques such as X-ray crystallography and electron microscopy into consistent, fully atomistic structures. Here, commonly employed strategies for computational real-space structural refinement are reviewed, and their specific applications are illustrated for several large macromolecular complexes: ribosome, virus capsids, chemosensory array, and photosynthetic chromatophore. The increasingly important role of computational methods in large-scale structural refinement, along with current and future challenges, is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cryo-EM; flexible fitting; hybrid methods; integrative modeling; molecular dynamics; simulation
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27145875 PMCID: PMC5526348 DOI: 10.1146/annurev-biophys-062215-011113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Biophys ISSN: 1936-122X Impact factor: 12.981