4.7 Article

Computing the Relative Stabilities and the Per-Residue Components in Protein Conformational Changes

Journal

STRUCTURE
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 168-175

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2013.10.015

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Funding

  1. Laufer Center
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM34993]

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Protein molecules often undergo conformational changes. In order to gain insights into the forces that drive such changes, it would be useful to have a method that computes the per-residue contributions to the conversion free energy. Here, we describe the confine-convert-release (CCR) method, which is applicable to large conformational changes. We show that CCR correctly predicts the stable states of several chameleon sequences that have previously been challenging for molecular simulations. CCR can often discriminate better from worse predictions of native protein models in critical assessment of protein structure prediction (GASP). We show how the total conversion free energies can be parsed into per-residue free-energy components. Such parsing gives insights into which amino acids are most responsible for given transformations. For example, here we are able to reverse-engineer the known design principles of the chameleon proteins. This opens up the possibility for systematic improvements in structure-prediction scoring functions, in the design of protein conformational switches, and in interpreting protein mechanisms at the amino-acid level.

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