Abstract

BackgroundMany important cellular processes are carried out by protein complexes. To provide physical pictures of interacting proteins, many computational protein-protein prediction methods have been developed in the past. However, it is still difficult to identify the correct docking complex structure within top ranks among alternative conformations.ResultsWe present a novel protein docking algorithm that utilizes imperfect protein-protein binding interface prediction for guiding protein docking. Since the accuracy of protein binding site prediction varies depending on cases, the challenge is to develop a method which does not deteriorate but improves docking results by using a binding site prediction which may not be 100% accurate. The algorithm, named PI-LZerD (using Predicted Interface with Local 3D Zernike descriptor-based Docking algorithm), is based on a pair wise protein docking prediction algorithm, LZerD, which we have developed earlier. PI-LZerD starts from performing docking prediction using the provided protein-protein binding interface prediction as constraints, which is followed by the second round of docking with updated docking interface information to further improve docking conformation. Benchmark results on bound and unbound cases show that PI-LZerD consistently improves the docking prediction accuracy as compared with docking without using binding site prediction or using the binding site prediction as post-filtering.ConclusionWe have developed PI-LZerD, a pairwise docking algorithm, which uses imperfect protein-protein binding interface prediction to improve docking accuracy. PI-LZerD consistently showed better prediction accuracy over alternative methods in the series of benchmark experiments including docking using actual docking interface site predictions as well as unbound docking cases.

Highlights

  • Many important cellular processes are carried out by protein complexes

  • The prediction accuracy of original LZerD without using the protein-protein interface (PPI) information is shown for comparison

  • The naive post-filtering achieved near perfect prediction accuracy when the perfectly accurate PPI information was provided

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Summary

Introduction

Many important cellular processes are carried out by protein complexes. To provide physical pictures of interacting proteins, many computational protein-protein prediction methods have been developed in the past. It is still difficult to identify the correct docking complex structure within top ranks among alternative conformations. Despite significant efforts of developing methods, it is still difficult to identify and rank the correct conformations in top ranks among hundreds of decoys [18,27,34] as is evidenced by results from recent Critical Assessment of Prediction of Interactions (CAPRI), a community wide experiment on the comparative evaluation of protein-protein docking methods [10]

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