Abstract

The increased availability of user‐friendly and accessible computational tools for biomolecular modeling would expand the reach and application of biomolecular engineering and design. For protein modeling, one key challenge is to reduce the complexities of 3D protein folds to sets of parametric equations that nonetheless capture the salient features of these structures accurately. At present, this is possible for a subset of proteins, namely, repeat proteins. The α‐helical coiled coil provides one such example, which represents ≈ 3–5% of all known protein‐encoding regions of DNA. Coiled coils are bundles of α helices that can be described by a small set of structural parameters. Here we describe how this parametric description can be implemented in an easy‐to‐use web application, called CCBuilder 2.0, for modeling and optimizing both α‐helical coiled coils and polyproline‐based collagen triple helices. This has many applications from providing models to aid molecular replacement for X‐ray crystallography, in silico model building and engineering of natural and designed protein assemblies, and through to the creation of completely de novo “dark matter” protein structures. CCBuilder 2.0 is available as a web‐based application, the code for which is open‐source and can be downloaded freely. http://coiledcoils.chm.bris.ac.uk/ccbuilder2.Lay SummaryWe have created CCBuilder 2.0, an easy to use web‐based application that can model structures for a whole class of proteins, the α‐helical coiled coil, which is estimated to account for 3–5% of all proteins in nature. CCBuilder 2.0 will be of use to a large number of protein scientists engaged in fundamental studies, such as protein structure determination, through to more‐applied research including designing and engineering novel proteins that have potential applications in biotechnology.

Highlights

  • Protein design has advanced rapidly over the past decade, with biomolecular modeling making a significant contribution to this development.[1,2,3,4,5,6] An exciting and emerging aspect of protein design centers on exploring the “dark matter” of protein fold space; that is, those protein folds that are theoretically possible but have not been observed in or explored by nature.[7]

  • We describe how this parametric description can be implemented in an easy-touse web application, called CCBuilder 2.0, for modeling and optimizing both a-helical coiled coils and polyproline-based collagen triple helices

  • This offers near unlimited potential for designing new protein structures that could have a range of applications in synthetic biology and biotechnology.[7,8]

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Summary

Edinburgh Research Explorer

Citation for published version: Wood, CW & Woolfson, DN 2018, 'CCBuilder 2.0: Powerful and accessible coiled-coil modeling', Protein Science, vol 27, no. Link: Link to publication record in Edinburgh Research Explorer Document Version: Publisher's PDF, known as Version of record

Introduction
Wood and Woolfson
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