4.7 Article

Integrative structural modeling of macromolecular complexes using Assembline

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 152-176

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41596-021-00640-z

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Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany [FKZ 031L0100]

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Integrative modeling with Assembline enables efficient structure determination of macromolecular complexes by combining data from multiple experimental sources, including electron microscopy maps. The software package allows for exhaustive sampling of conformational space through a multistep procedure, providing new modeling restraints and a unique configuration system for setting up the modeling project.
Integrative modeling enables structure determination of macromolecular complexes by combining data from multiple experimental sources such as X-ray crystallography, electron microscopy or cross-linking mass spectrometry. It is particularly useful for complexes not amenable to high-resolution electron microscopy-complexes that are flexible, heterogeneous or imaged in cells with cryo-electron tomography. We have recently developed an integrative modeling protocol that allowed us to model multi-megadalton complexes as large as the nuclear pore complex. Here, we describe the Assembline software package, which combines multiple programs and libraries with our own algorithms in a streamlined modeling pipeline. Assembline builds ensembles of models satisfying data from atomic structures or homology models, electron microscopy maps and other experimental data, and provides tools for their analysis. Compared with other methods, Assembline enables efficient sampling of conformational space through a multistep procedure, provides new modeling restraints and includes a unique configuration system for setting up the modeling project. Our protocol achieves exhaustive sampling in less than 100-1,000 CPU-hours even for complexes in the megadalton range. For larger complexes, resources available in institutional or public computer clusters are needed and sufficient to run the protocol. We also provide step-by-step instructions for preparing the input, running the core modeling steps and assessing modeling performance at any stage. Many biological complexes are flexible or heterogeneous. Integrative modeling using Assembline enables structure determination of these macromolecular complexes by combining data from multiple experimental sources, including electron microscopy maps.

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