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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jul 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39026849

RESUMEN

The oligomerization of protein macromolecules on cell membranes plays a fundamental role in regulating cellular function. From modulating signal transduction to directing immune response, membrane proteins (MPs) play a crucial role in biological processes and are often the target of many pharmaceutical drugs. Despite their biological relevance, the challenges in experimental determination have hampered the structural availability of membrane proteins and their complexes. Computational docking provides a promising alternative to model membrane protein complex structures. Here, we present Rosetta-MPDock, a flexible transmembrane (TM) protein docking protocol that captures binding-induced conformational changes. Rosetta-MPDock samples large conformational ensembles of flexible monomers and docks them within an implicit membrane environment. We benchmarked this method on 29 TM-protein complexes of variable backbone flexibility. These complexes are classified based on the root-mean-square deviation between the unbound and bound states (RMSDUB) as: rigid (RMSDUB <1.2 Å), moderately-flexible (RMSDUB ∈ [1.2, 2.2) Å), and flexible targets (RMSDUB > 2.2 Å). In a local docking scenario, i.e. with membrane protein partners starting ≈10 Å apart embedded in the membrane in their unbound conformations, Rosetta-MPDock successfully predicts the correct interface (success defined as achieving 3 near-native structures in the 5 top-ranked models) for 67% moderately flexible targets and 60% of the highly flexible targets, a substantial improvement from the existing membrane protein docking methods. Further, by integrating AlphaFold2-multimer for structure determination and using Rosetta-MPDock for docking and refinement, we demonstrate improved success rates over the benchmark targets from 64% to 73%. Rosetta-MPDock advances the capabilities for membrane protein complex structure prediction and modeling to tackle key biological questions and elucidate functional mechanisms in the membrane environment. The benchmark set and the code is available for public use at github.com/Graylab/MPDock.

2.
Protein Sci ; 33(2): e4862, 2024 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38148272

RESUMEN

Conventional protein-protein docking algorithms usually rely on heavy candidate sampling and reranking, but these steps are time-consuming and hinder applications that require high-throughput complex structure prediction, for example, structure-based virtual screening. Existing deep learning methods for protein-protein docking, despite being much faster, suffer from low docking success rates. In addition, they simplify the problem to assume no conformational changes within any protein upon binding (rigid docking). This assumption precludes applications when binding-induced conformational changes play a role, such as allosteric inhibition or docking from uncertain unbound model structures. To address these limitations, we present GeoDock, a multitrack iterative transformer network to predict a docked structure from separate docking partners. Unlike deep learning models for protein structure prediction that input multiple sequence alignments, GeoDock inputs just the sequences and structures of the docking partners, which suits the tasks when the individual structures are given. GeoDock is flexible at the protein residue level, allowing the prediction of conformational changes upon binding. On the Database of Interacting Protein Structures (DIPS) test set, GeoDock achieves a 43% top-1 success rate, outperforming all other tested methods. However, in the standard DIPS train/test splits, we discovered contamination of close homologs in the training set. After decontaminating the training set, the success rate is 31%. On the DB5.5 test set and a benchmark dataset of antibody-antigen complexes, GeoDock outperforms the deep learning models trained using the same dataset but falls behind most of the conventional methods and AlphaFold-Multimer. GeoDock attains an average inference speed of under 1 s on a single GPU, enabling its application in large-scale structure screening. Although binding-induced conformational changes are still a challenge owing to limited training and evaluation data, our architecture sets up the foundation to capture this backbone flexibility. Code and a demonstration Jupyter notebook are available at https://github.com/Graylab/GeoDock.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Proteínas , Salicilatos , Conformación Proteica , Unión Proteica , Proteínas/química , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular
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