4.4 Article

Modeling protein structure at near atomic resolutions with Gorgon

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
Volume 174, Issue 2, Pages 360-373

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsb.2011.01.015

Keywords

Cryo-EM; Gorgon; Modeling; Protein structure; Near-atomic resolution

Funding

  1. NIH through the National Center for Research Resources
  2. National Institute of General Medical Science [R01GM079429]
  3. National Science Foundation [IIS-0705644, IIS-0705474, IIS-0705538]
  4. Gulf Coast Consortia [1 T90 DA022885-01]

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Electron cryo-microscopy (cryo-EM) has played an increasingly important role in elucidating the structure and function of macromolecular assemblies in near native solution conditions. Typically, however, only non-atomic resolution reconstructions have been obtained for these large complexes, necessitating computational tools for integrating and extracting structural details. With recent advances in cryo-EM, maps at near-atomic resolutions have been achieved for several macromolecular assemblies from which models have been manually constructed. In this work, we describe a new interactive modeling toolkit called Gorgon targeted at intermediate to near-atomic resolution density maps (10-3.5 angstrom), particularly from cryo-EM. Gorgon's de novo modeling procedure couples sequence-based secondary structure prediction with feature detection and geometric modeling techniques to generate initial protein backbone models. Beyond model building, Gorgon is an extensible interactive visualization platform with a variety of computational tools for annotating a wide variety of 3D volumes. Examples from cryo-EM maps of Rotavirus and Rice Dwarf Virus are used to demonstrate its applicability to modeling protein structure. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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