High-throughput 3D structural homology via NMR resonance assignment

被引:0
|
作者
Langmead, CJ [1 ]
Donald, BR [1 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Dept Comp Sci, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
One goal of the structural genomics initiative is the identification of new protein folds. Sequence-based structural homology prediction methods are an important means for prioritizing unknown proteins for structure determination. However, an important challenge remains: two highly dissimilar sequences can have similar folds - how can we detect this rapidly, in the context of structural genomics? High-throughput NMR experiments, coupled with novel algorithms for data analysis, can address this challenge. We report an automated procedure, called HD, for detecting 3D structural homologies from sparse, unassigned protein NMR data. Our method identifies 3D models in a protein structural database whose geometries best fit the unassigned experimental NMR data. HD does not use, and is thus not limited by sequence homology. The method can also be used to confirm or refute structural predictions made by other techniques such as protein threading or homology modelling. The algorithm runs in O(pn + pn(5/2) log (cn) + p log p) time, where p is the number of proteins in the database, n is the number of residues in the target protein and c is the maximum edge weight in an integer-weighted bipartite graph. Our experiments on real NMR data from 3 different proteins against a database of 4,500 representative folds demonstrate that the method identifies closely related protein folds, including sub-domains of larger proteins, with as little as 10-30% sequence homology between the target protein (or sub-domain) and the computed model. In particular we report no false-negatives or false-positives despite significant percentages of missing experimental data.
引用
收藏
页码:278 / 289
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Perfused 3D angiogenic sprouting in a high-throughput in vitro platform
    van Duinen, V.
    Zhu, D.
    Ramakers, C.
    van Zonneveld, A. J.
    Vulto, P.
    Hankemeier, T.
    ANGIOGENESIS, 2019, 22 (01) : 157 - 165
  • [42] 3D Robotic System Development for High-throughput Crop Phenotyping
    Zhang, Chongyuan
    Gao, Honghong
    Zhou, Jianfeng
    Cousins, Asaph
    Pumphrey, Michael O.
    Sankaran, Sindhuja
    IFAC PAPERSONLINE, 2016, 49 (16): : 242 - 247
  • [43] High-throughput NMR spectroscopy
    D. Raftery
    Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 2004, 378 : 1403 - 1404
  • [44] High-throughput NMR spectroscopy
    Raftery, D
    ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2004, 378 (06) : 1403 - 1404
  • [45] High-throughput 3D tumoroid models for immunotherapy and drug discovery
    Nguyen, Duy
    McGhee, Alexander
    Pedro, Diego
    Pepe, Alfonso
    Schaller, Matthew
    Smolchek, Ryan
    Famiglietti, Jack
    Warrington, Stephanie
    Sawyer, W. Gregory
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2023, 83 (07)
  • [46] Perfused 3D angiogenic sprouting in a high-throughput in vitro platform
    V. van Duinen
    D. Zhu
    C. Ramakers
    A. J. van Zonneveld
    P. Vulto
    T. Hankemeier
    Angiogenesis, 2019, 22 : 157 - 165
  • [47] High-Throughput Permeability Assay on Perfused 3D Microvessels In Vitro
    van Duinen, Vincent
    Ramakers, Christian
    Trietsch, Sebastiaan
    van Zonneveld, Anton Jan
    Hankemeier, Thomas
    Vulto, Paul
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR RESEARCH, 2019, 56 : 93 - 93
  • [48] High-throughput morphometric analysis of pulmonary airways in MSCT via a mixed 3D/2D approach
    Ortner, Margarete
    Fetita, Catalin
    Brillet, Pierre-Yves
    Preteux, Francoise
    Grenier, Philippe
    MEDICAL IMAGING 2011: COMPUTER-AIDED DIAGNOSIS, 2011, 7963
  • [49] 3D structural homology detection via unassigned residual dipolar couplings
    Langmead, CJ
    Donald, BR
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2003 IEEE BIOINFORMATICS CONFERENCE, 2003, : 209 - 217
  • [50] Homology Models in Docking and High-Throughput Docking
    Cavasotto, Claudio N.
    CURRENT TOPICS IN MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 2011, 11 (12) : 1528 - 1534