Abstract

Residue depth accurately measures burial and parameterizes local protein environment. Depth is the distance of any atom/residue to the closest bulk water. We consider the non-bulk waters to occupy cavities, whose volumes are determined using a Voronoi procedure. Our estimation of cavity sizes is statistically superior to estimates made by CASTp and VOIDOO, and on par with McVol over a data set of 40 cavities. Our calculated cavity volumes correlated best with the experimentally determined destabilization of 34 mutants from five proteins. Some of the cavities identified are capable of binding small molecule ligands. In this study, we have enhanced our depth-based predictions of binding sites by including evolutionary information. We have demonstrated that on a database (LigASite) of ∼200 proteins, we perform on par with ConCavity and better than MetaPocket 2.0. Our predictions, while less sensitive, are more specific and precise. Finally, we use depth (and other features) to predict pKas of GLU, ASP, LYS and HIS residues. Our results produce an average error of just <1 pH unit over 60 predictions. Our simple empirical method is statistically on par with two and superior to three other methods while inferior to only one. The DEPTH server (http://mspc.bii.a-star.edu.sg/depth/) is an ideal tool for rapid yet accurate structural analyses of protein structures.

Highlights

  • Atom/residue depth measures the degree of burial of an atom/residue from bulk solvent [1]

  • Residue depth has been used to predict the location of folding nucleation sites [4,6], protein–protein interaction hot spots [1], phosphorylation sites [4] and small molecule-binding sites on proteins [7]

  • Residue depth is computed as the average distance to the closest bulk solvent molecule from each solvation iteration

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Summary

Introduction

Atom/residue depth measures the degree of burial of an atom/residue from bulk solvent [1]. This simple measure has found a variety of uses in characterizing physical and chemical properties of protein structures. Residue depth has been used to predict the location of folding nucleation sites [4,6], protein–protein interaction hot spots [1], phosphorylation sites [4] and small molecule-binding sites on proteins [7]. We have explored three applications of residue depth, namely, estimating the sizes of cavities in proteins, improving protein ligand-binding site prediction and predicting acid dissociation constant (pKa) for ionizable amino acids GLU, ASP, LYS and HIS

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