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1.
Molecules ; 26(22)2021 Nov 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34834140

RESUMEN

Although atomic structures have been determined directly from cryo-EM density maps with high resolutions, current structure determination methods for medium resolution (5 to 10 Å) cryo-EM maps are limited by the availability of structure templates. Secondary structure traces are lines detected from a cryo-EM density map for α-helices and ß-strands of a protein. A topology of secondary structures defines the mapping between a set of sequence segments and a set of traces of secondary structures in three-dimensional space. In order to enhance accuracy in ranking secondary structure topologies, we explored a method that combines three sources of information: a set of sequence segments in 1D, a set of amino acid contact pairs in 2D, and a set of traces in 3D at the secondary structure level. A test of fourteen cases shows that the accuracy of predicted secondary structures is critical for deriving topologies. The use of significant long-range contact pairs is most effective at enriching the rank of the maximum-match topology for proteins with a large number of secondary structures, if the secondary structure prediction is fairly accurate. It was observed that the enrichment depends on the quality of initial topology candidates in this approach. We provide detailed analysis in various cases to show the potential and challenge when combining three sources of information.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Bases de Datos de Proteínas , Modelos Moleculares , Proteínas/ultraestructura , Dominios Proteicos , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Proteínas/química
2.
J Chem Inf Model ; 60(5): 2644-2650, 2020 05 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32216344

RESUMEN

Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) density maps at medium resolution (5-10 Å) reveal secondary structural features such as α-helices and ß-sheets, but they lack the side chain details that would enable a direct structure determination. Among the more than 800 entries in the Electron Microscopy Data Bank (EMDB) of medium-resolution density maps that are associated with atomic models, a wide variety of similarities can be observed between maps and models. To validate such atomic models and to classify structural features, a local similarity criterion, the F1 score, is proposed and evaluated in this study. The F1 score is theoretically normalized to a range from zero to one, providing a local measure of cylindrical agreement between the density and atomic model of a helix. A systematic scan of 30,994 helices (among 3,247 protein chains modeled into medium-resolution density maps) reveals an actual range of observed F1 scores from 0.171 to 0.848, suggesting that the cylindrical fit of the current data is well stratified by the proposed measure. The best (highest) F1 scores tend to be associated with regions that exhibit high and spatially homogeneous local resolution (between 5 Å and 7.5 Å) in the helical density. The proposed F1 scores can be used as a discriminative classifier for validation studies and as a ranking criterion for cryo-EM density features in databases.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Modelos Moleculares , Conformación Proteica en Hélice alfa , Conformación Proteica en Lámina beta
3.
Microsc Microanal ; 29(29 Suppl 1): 977-978, 2023 Jul 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37613638
4.
QRB Discov ; 32022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37485023

RESUMEN

Recent breakthroughs in deep learning-based protein structure prediction show that it is possible to obtain highly accurate models for a wide range of difficult protein targets for which only the amino acid sequence is known. The availability of accurately predicted models from sequences can potentially revolutionise many modelling approaches in structural biology, including the interpretation of cryo-EM density maps. Although atomic structures can be readily solved from cryo-EM maps of better than 4 Å resolution, it is still challenging to determine accurate models from lower-resolution density maps. Here, we report on the benefits of models predicted by AlphaFold2 (the best-performing structure prediction method at CASP14) on cryo-EM refinement using the Phenix refinement suite for AlphaFold2 models. To study the robustness of model refinement at a lower resolution of interest, we introduced hybrid maps (i.e. experimental cryo-EM maps) filtered to lower resolutions by real-space convolution. The AlphaFold2 models were refined to attain good accuracies above 0.8 TM scores for 9 of the 13 cryo-EM maps. TM scores improved for AlphaFold2 models refined against all 13 cryo-EM maps of better than 4.5 Å resolution, 8 hybrid maps of 6 Å resolution, and 3 hybrid maps of 8 Å resolution. The results show that it is possible (at least with the Phenix protocol) to extend the refinement success below 4.5 Å resolution. We even found isolated cases in which resolution lowering was slightly beneficial for refinement, suggesting that high-resolution cryo-EM maps might sometimes trap AlphaFold2 models in local optima.

5.
Front Bioinform ; 1: 710119, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36303800

RESUMEN

Although cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) has been successfully used to derive atomic structures for many proteins, it is still challenging to derive atomic structures when the resolution of cryo-EM density maps is in the medium resolution range, such as 5-10 Å. Detection of protein secondary structures, such as helices and ß-sheets, from cryo-EM density maps provides constraints for deriving atomic structures from such maps. As more deep learning methodologies are being developed for solving various molecular problems, effective tools are needed for users to access them. We have developed an effective software bundle, DeepSSETracer, for the detection of protein secondary structure from cryo-EM component maps in medium resolution. The bundle contains the network architecture and a U-Net model trained with a curriculum and gradient of episodic memory (GEM). The bundle integrates the deep neural network with the visualization capacity provided in ChimeraX. Using a Linux server that is remotely accessed by Windows users, it takes about 6 s on one CPU and one GPU for the trained deep neural network to detect secondary structures in a cryo-EM component map containing 446 amino acids. A test using 28 chain components of cryo-EM maps shows overall residue-level F1 scores of 0.72 and 0.65 to detect helices and ß-sheets, respectively. Although deep learning applications are built on software frameworks, such as PyTorch and Tensorflow, our pioneer work here shows that integration of deep learning applications with ChimeraX is a promising and effective approach. Our experiments show that the F1 score measured at the residue level is an effective evaluation of secondary structure detection for individual classes. The test using 28 cryo-EM component maps shows that DeepSSETracer detects ß-sheets more accurately than Emap2sec+, with a weighted average residue-level F1 score of 0.65 and 0.42, respectively. It also shows that Emap2sec+ detects helices more accurately than DeepSSETracer with a weighted average residue-level F1 score of 0.77 and 0.72 respectively.

6.
ACM BCB ; 20202020 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35838376

RESUMEN

Cryo-electron microscopy is a major structure determination technique for large molecular machines and membrane-associated complexes. Although atomic structures have been determined directly from cryo-EM density maps with high resolutions, current structure determination methods for medium resolution (5 to 10 Å) cryo-EM maps are limited by the availability of structure templates. Secondary structure traces are lines detected from a cryo-EM density map for α-helices and ß-strands of a protein. When combined with secondary structure sequence segments predicted from a protein sequence, it is possible to generate a set of likely topologies of α-traces and ß-sheet traces. A topology describes the overall folding relationship among secondary structures; it is a critical piece of information for deriving the corresponding atomic structure. We propose a method for protein structure prediction that combines three sources of information: the secondary structure traces detected from the cryo-EM density map, predicted secondary structure sequence segments, and amino acid contact pairs predicted using MULTICOM. A case study shows that using amino acid contact prediction from MULTICOM improves the ranking of the true topology. Our observations convey that using a small set of highly voted secondary structure contact pairs enhances the ranking in all experiments conducted for this case.

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