Abstract

Flexible peptides that fold upon binding to another protein molecule mediate a large number of regulatory interactions in the living cell and may provide highly specific recognition modules. We present Rosetta FlexPepDock ab-initio, a protocol for simultaneous docking and de-novo folding of peptides, starting from an approximate specification of the peptide binding site. Using the Rosetta fragments library and a coarse-grained structural representation of the peptide and the receptor, FlexPepDock ab-initio samples efficiently and simultaneously the space of possible peptide backbone conformations and rigid-body orientations over the receptor surface of a given binding site. The subsequent all-atom refinement of the coarse-grained models includes full side-chain modeling of both the receptor and the peptide, resulting in high-resolution models in which key side-chain interactions are recapitulated. The protocol was applied to a benchmark in which peptides were modeled over receptors in either their bound backbone conformations or in their free, unbound form. Near-native peptide conformations were identified in 18/26 of the bound cases and 7/14 of the unbound cases. The protocol performs well on peptides from various classes of secondary structures, including coiled peptides with unusual turns and kinks. The results presented here significantly extend the scope of state-of-the-art methods for high-resolution peptide modeling, which can now be applied to a wide variety of peptide-protein interactions where no prior information about the peptide backbone conformation is available, enabling detailed structure-based studies and manipulation of those interactions.

Highlights

  • Peptide-mediated interactions with globular proteins play a prominent role in signaling and regulatory networks of the living cell [1,2]

  • It has been estimated that between 15%-40% of all protein-protein interactions are mediated by flexible peptide that fold upon binding to a globular receptor [2]

  • We introduce Rosetta FlexPepDock ab-initio, which is designed to address the subset of problems where the approximate location of the peptide binding site is known, but no information about the peptide backbone conformation is available

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Peptide-mediated interactions with globular proteins play a prominent role in signaling and regulatory networks of the living cell [1,2]. It has been estimated that between 15%-40% of all protein-protein interactions are mediated by flexible peptide that fold upon binding to a globular receptor [2]. These peptides often form a modular binding motif, which can be embedded in intrinsically unstructured protein regions and within flexible loops, in order to confer desired interactions [2,3,4,5]. Due to their cardinal role in regulatory mechanisms Peptide molecules and their derivates hold great potential for targeted modulation of the cellular network of protein interactions

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.