| Literature DB >> 29132296 |
Jochen Ismer1, Alexander S Rose1,2, Johanna K S Tiemann1,3, Peter W Hildebrand4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Single-particle analysis of electron cryo-microscopy (cryo-EM) is a key technology for elucidation of macromolecular structures. Recent technical advances in hardware and software developments significantly enhanced the resolution of cryo-EM density maps and broadened the applicability and the circle of users. To facilitate modeling of macromolecules into cryo-EM density maps, fast and easy to use methods for modeling are now demanded.Entities:
Keywords: Cryo-EM; Flexible fitting; Fragment based modeling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29132296 PMCID: PMC5683378 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-017-1904-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1Workflow of FragFit. As input (top), (1) a PDB structure, (2) the stem atoms of residues flanking the queried segment, (3) the amino acid sequence of the queried segment and (4) the cryo-EM density map with (5) its resolution must be provided. a Sequence similarity between fragment and queried segment and matching of geometric fingerprints (Additional file 1: Figure S2) are used as evaluation criteria for FragSearch. b Cryo-EM density maps are preprocessed to minimize calculation time and to reduce false positive predictions. For that purpose, a minimal box limited to the maximum density of the missing segment is extracted and occupied densities are deleted. c Suitable fragments identified by FragSearch are re-scored by the Pearson cross-correlation coefficient between simulated and experimentally determined cryo-EM density maps, which selects for the best fitting fragments. All steps are presented in more detail in Additional file 1: Figure S6
Structures and cryo-EM density maps used for evaluation of FragFit
| EMDB-entry code | PDB-entry codes | Biological system | Resolution in Å | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1721 | 3J59,3J5A | 70S ribosome | 12.0 | (Bock et al., [ |
| 1798 | 2XSY,2XTG | 70S ribosome | 7.8 | (Ratje et al., [ |
| 2490 | 4CE4 | Mitochondrial large ribosomal subunit | 4.9 | (Greber et al., [ |
| 2566 | 3J6B | Mitochondrial large ribosomal subunit | 3.2 | (Amunts et al., [ |
| 5256 | 3IZX | cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus | 3.1 | (Yu et al., [ |
| 2325 | 3ZPZ | GroEL/ES | 8.9 | (Chen et al., [ |
| 5776 | 3J5Q | TRPV1 | 3.8 | (Cao et al., [ |
| 1733 | 3C91 | 20S proteasome | 6.8 | (Rabl et al., [ |
Fig. 2RMSD-based FragFit benchmarks. a Absolute backbone RMSD values of predicted fragment (top-hit) and original segment by FragSearch (double triangle) or FragFit (black star). b Comparison of absolute backbone RMSD values of predicted fragment (top-hit) and original segment by FragFit for the different structural elements helices (grey square), β-sheets (black rhombus) or loops (gray triangle). c Comparison of ΔRMSD (=RMSD FragSearch – RMSD FragFit) of top hit (gray bar) and top five hits (blue bars). d Comparison of ΔRMSD of top hits (gray bars) and only those top-hits were the RMSD of FragSearch is above the mean-value
Fig. 3ΔRMSD between FragSearch and FragFit for simulated cryo-EM maps of different resolutions. The gain of FragFit over FragSearch is constant for resolutions ranging from 4 to 12 Å for fragments of at least 12 residues length. Only a minor improvement of prediction quality is obtained with resolutions of 15 Å or 20 Å for segments of at least 11 or 20 residues length, respectively
Fig. 4FragFit examples. a A 12 residue long β-sheet from Ribosomal protein L28 (PDB 2XTG, template PDB 3FZL with 25% sequence identity). b TRPV1 ankyrin repeat region (PDB 3J5Q, template PDB 3EU9, sequence identity 23%). c Loop in GroEL connecting two β-sheets (PDB 3ZPZ, template PDB 3RTK with 26% sequence identity).d Long helix in TRPV1 (PDB 3J5Q,template PDB 3R2P with 19% sequence identity). Originally fitted structures are colored gray, fragments found by FragFit are colored orange