| Literature DB >> 31891416 |
Alisa Khramushin1, Orly Marcu1, Nawsad Alam1, Orly Shimony1, Dzmitry Padhorny2,3, Emiliano Brini3, Ken A Dill3,4,5, Sandor Vajda6,7, Dima Kozakov2,3, Ora Schueler-Furman1.
Abstract
Peptide-protein docking is challenging due to the considerable conformational freedom of the peptide. CAPRI rounds 38-45 included two peptide-protein interactions, both characterized by a peptide forming an additional beta strand of a beta sheet in the receptor. Using the Rosetta FlexPepDock peptide docking protocol we generated top-performing, high-accuracy models for targets 134 and 135, involving an interaction between a peptide derived from L-MAG with DLC8. In addition, we were able to generate the only medium-accuracy models for a particularly challenging target, T121. In contrast to the classical peptide-mediated interaction, in which receptor side chains contact both peptide backbone and side chains, beta-sheet complementation involves a major contribution to binding by hydrogen bonds between main chain atoms. To establish how binding affinity and specificity are established in this special class of peptide-protein interactions, we extracted PeptiDBeta, a benchmark of solved structures of different protein domains that are bound by peptides via beta-sheet complementation, and tested our protocol for global peptide-docking PIPER-FlexPepDock on this dataset. We find that the beta-strand part of the peptide is sufficient to generate approximate and even high resolution models of many interactions, but inclusion of adjacent motif residues often provides additional information necessary to achieve high resolution model quality.Entities:
Keywords: CAPRI; FlexPepDock; Rosetta; beta sheet interactions; high-resolution modeling; peptide docking; peptide-protein interactions
Year: 2020 PMID: 31891416 PMCID: PMC7539656 DOI: 10.1002/prot.25871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteins ISSN: 0887-3585