Abstract

BackgroundMany biological processes involve the physical interaction between protein domains. Understanding these functional associations requires knowledge of the molecular structure. Experimental investigations though present considerable difficulties and there is therefore a need for accurate and reliable computational methods. In this paper we present a novel method that seeks to dock protein domains using a contact map representation. Rather than providing a full three dimensional model of the complex, the method predicts contacting residues across the interface. We use a scoring function that combines structural, physicochemical and evolutionary information, where each potential residue contact is assigned a value according to the scoring function and the hypothesis is that the real configuration of contacts is the one that maximizes the score. The search is performed with a simulated annealing algorithm directly in contact space.ResultsWe have tested the method on interacting domain pairs that are part of the same protein (intra-molecular domains). We show that it correctly predicts some contacts and that predicted residues tend to be significantly closer to each other than other pairs of residues in the same domains. Moreover we find that predicted contacts can often discriminate the best model (or the native structure, if present) among a set of optimal solutions generated by a standard docking procedure.ConclusionContact docking appears feasible and able to complement other computational methods for the prediction of protein-protein interactions. With respect to more standard docking algorithms it might be more suitable to handle protein conformational changes and to predict complexes starting from protein models.

Highlights

  • Many biological processes involve the physical interaction between protein domains

  • There are a number of advantages in working with contacts maps: it is a simple representation and it should be possible to search the contact space in an efficient manner; a small number of changes on a map may correspond to substantial changes in three dimensions, reducing computational times; in principle any interaction pattern can be represented even allowing for backbone flexibility upon docking

  • In this work we have presented a novel method to infer contacting residues at domain-domain interfaces

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Summary

Introduction

Many biological processes involve the physical interaction between protein domains. Understanding these functional associations requires knowledge of the molecular structure. Docking algorithms attempt to predict the native threedimensional (3D) structure of a complex starting from the atomic coordinates of its constituent proteins, solved in isolation ("unbound") [7]. It is a challenging problem which has attracted a great deal of interest in view of its potential biomedical applications (e.g rational drug design and protein engineering [8]). The challenge will be to use them to model large, multidomain proteins [13]

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