Abstract

BackgroundStructural excursions of a protein at equilibrium are key to biomolecular recognition and function modulation. Protein modeling research is driven by the need to aid wet laboratories in characterizing equilibrium protein dynamics. In principle, structural excursions of a protein can be directly observed via simulation of its dynamics, but the disparate temporal scales involved in such excursions make this approach computationally impractical. On the other hand, an informative representation of the structure space available to a protein at equilibrium can be obtained efficiently via stochastic optimization, but this approach does not directly yield information on equilibrium dynamics.MethodsWe present here a novel methodology that first builds a multi-dimensional map of the energy landscape that underlies the structure space of a given protein and then queries the computed map for energetically-feasible excursions between structures of interest. An evolutionary algorithm builds such maps with a practical computational budget. Graphical techniques analyze a computed multi-dimensional map and expose interesting features of an energy landscape, such as basins and barriers. A path searching algorithm then queries a nearest-neighbor graph representation of a computed map for energetically-feasible basin-to-basin excursions.ResultsEvaluation is conducted on intrinsically-dynamic proteins of importance in human biology and disease. Visual statistical analysis of the maps of energy landscapes computed by the proposed methodology reveals features already captured in the wet laboratory, as well as new features indicative of interesting, unknown thermodynamically-stable and semi-stable regions of the equilibrium structure space. Comparison of maps and structural excursions computed by the proposed methodology on sequence variants of a protein sheds light on the role of equilibrium structure and dynamics in the sequence-function relationship.ConclusionsApplications show that the proposed methodology is effective at locating basins in complex energy landscapes and computing basin-basin excursions of a protein with a practical computational budget. While the actual temporal scales spanned by a structural excursion cannot be directly obtained due to the foregoing of simulation of dynamics, hypotheses can be formulated regarding the impact of sequence mutations on protein function. These hypotheses are valuable in instigating further research in wet laboratories.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-2798-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Structural excursions of a protein at equilibrium are key to biomolecular recognition and function modulation

  • While significant advances have been made in the wet laboratory [6, 9,10,11,12], existing techniques are in principle limited by the disparate spatio-temporal scales involved in protein dynamics; proteins undergo small and large (> 10Å) structural changes at different temporal scales, spanning from a few femto-seconds to milliseconds and more [13]

  • Test cases and experimental setup The proposed methodology is applied to 10 protein sequences, and performance is evaluated both in terms of running time and quality of the maps and structural excursions modeled on each sequence in relation with existing wet- and dry-laboratory evidence on known features of the energy landscapes and equilibrium dynamics

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Summary

Introduction

Structural excursions of a protein at equilibrium are key to biomolecular recognition and function modulation. The ability of a protein to switch between different structures under physiological conditions (at equilibrium) is key to biomolecular recognition and function modulation [7]. This finding warrants characterizing the equilibrium structural dynamics of a protein as a means of exposing the range of activities of a protein in the cell [8]. Dwell times of proteins in specific structural states may be too short to be detected in the wet laboratory

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