4.3 Article

STITCHER: Dynamic assembly of likely amyloid and prion β-structures from secondary structure predictions

Journal

PROTEINS-STRUCTURE FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 80, Issue 2, Pages 410-420

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/prot.23203

Keywords

structure prediction; ss-sheets; energy model; stacking; entropy; dynamic programming

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM081871, GM25874]
  2. HHMI

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The supersecondary structure of amyloids and prions, proteins of intense clinical and biological interest, are difficult to determine by standard experimental or computational means. In addition, significant conformational heterogeneity is known or suspected to exist in many amyloid fibrils. Previous work has demonstrated that probability-based prediction of discrete beta-strand pairs can offer insight into these structures. Here, we devise a system of energetic rules that can be used to dynamically assemble these discrete beta-strand pairs into complete amyloid beta-structures. The STITCHER algorithm progressively stitches strand-pairs into full beta-sheets based on a novel free-energy model, incorporating experimentally observed amino-acid side-chain stacking contributions, entropic estimates, and steric restrictions for amyloidal parallel beta-sheet construction. A dynamic program computes the top 50 structures and returns both the highest scoring structure and a consensus structure taken by polling this list for common discrete elements. Putative structural heterogeneity can be inferred from sequence regions that compose poorly. Predictions show agreement with experimental models of Alzheimer's amyloid beta peptide and the Podospora anserina Het-s prion. Predictions of the HET-s homolog HET-S also reflect experimental observations of poor amyloid formation. We put forward predicted structures for the yeast prion Sup35, suggesting N-terminal structural stability enabled by tyrosine ladders, and C-terminal heterogeneity. Predictions for the Rnq1 prion and alpha-synuclein are also given, identifying a similar mix of homogenous and heterogeneous secondary structure elements. STITCHER provides novel insight into the energetic basis of amyloid structure, provides accurate structure predictions, and can help guide future experimental studies. Proteins 2012. (C) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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