scholarly journals Computational Methods for Protein Structure Determination and Protein Structure Prediction

2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 2
Author(s):  
Keehyoung JOO ◽  
Sung Jong LEE ◽  
Jooyoung LEE
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 103-111
Author(s):  
Krishna R Gupta ◽  
Uttam Patle ◽  
Uma Kabra ◽  
P. Mishra ◽  
Milind J Umekar

Three-dimensional protein structure prediction from amino acid sequence has been a thought-provoking task for decades, but it of pivotal importance as it provides a better understanding of its function. In recent years, the methods for prediction of protein structures have advanced considerably. Computational techniques and increase in protein sequence and structure databases have influence the laborious protein structure determination process. Still there is no single method which can predict all the protein structures. In this review, we describe the four stages of protein structure determination. We have also explored the currenttechniques used to uncover the protein structure and highpoint best suitable method for a given protein.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rahmatullah Roche ◽  
Sutanu Bhattacharya ◽  
Debswapna Bhattacharya

AbstractCrystallography and NMR system (CNS) is currently the de facto standard for fragment-free ab initio protein folding from inter-residue distance or contact maps. Despite its widespread use in protein structure prediction, CNS is a decade-old macromolecular structure determination system that was originally developed for solving macromolecular geometry from experimental restraints as opposed to predictive modeling driven by interaction map data. As such, the adaptation of the CNS experimental structure determination protocol for ab initio protein folding is intrinsically anomalous that may undermine the folding accuracy of computational protein structure prediction. In this paper, we propose a new CNS-free hierarchical structure modeling method called DConStruct for folding both soluble and membrane proteins driven by distance and contact information. Rigorous experimental validation shows that DConStruct attains much better reconstruction accuracy than CNS when tested with the same input contact map at varying contact thresholds. The hierarchical modeling with iterative self-correction employed in DConStruct scales at a much higher degree of folding accuracy than CNS with the increase in contact thresholds, ultimately approaching near-optimal reconstruction accuracy at higher-thresholded contact maps. The folding accuracy of DConStruct can be further improved by exploiting distance-based hybrid interaction maps at tri-level thresholding, as demonstrated by the better performance of our method in folding difficult free modeling targets from the 12th and 13th rounds of the Critical Assessment of techniques for protein Structure Prediction (CASP) experiments compared to several popular CNS- and fragment-based approaches, some of which even using much finer-grained distance maps than ours. Additional large-scale benchmarking shows that DConStruct can significantly improve the folding accuracy of membrane proteins compared to a CNS-based approach. These results collectively demonstrate the feasibility of greatly improving the accuracy of ab initio protein folding by optimally exploiting the information encoded in inter-residue interaction maps beyond what is possible by CNS.Author summaryPredicting the folded and functional 3-dimensional structure of a protein molecule from its amino acid sequence is of central importance to structural biology. Recently, promising advances have been made in ab initio protein folding due to the reasonably accurate estimation of inter-residue interaction maps at increasingly higher resolutions that range from binary contacts to finer-grained distances. Despite the progress in predicting the interaction maps, approaches for turning the residue-residue interactions projected in these maps into their precise spatial positioning heavily rely on a decade-old experimental structure determination protocol that is not suitable for predictive modeling. This paper presents a new hierarchical structure modeling method, DConStruct, which can better exploit the information encoded in the interaction maps at multiple granularities, from binary contact maps to distance-based hybrid maps at tri-level thresholding, for improved ab initio folding. Multiple large-scale benchmarking experiments show that our proposed method can substantially improve the folding accuracy for both soluble and membrane proteins compared to state-of-the-art approaches. DConStruct is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3 and freely available at https://github.com/Bhattacharya-Lab/DConStruct.


Author(s):  
Iwona A. Cymerman ◽  
Marcin Feder ◽  
Marcin PawŁowski ◽  
Michal A. Kurowski ◽  
Janusz M. Bujnicki

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 5553
Author(s):  
Subash C Pakhrin ◽  
Bikash Shrestha ◽  
Badri Adhikari ◽  
Dukka B KC

Obtaining an accurate description of protein structure is a fundamental step toward understanding the underpinning of biology. Although recent advances in experimental approaches have greatly enhanced our capabilities to experimentally determine protein structures, the gap between the number of protein sequences and known protein structures is ever increasing. Computational protein structure prediction is one of the ways to fill this gap. Recently, the protein structure prediction field has witnessed a lot of advances due to Deep Learning (DL)-based approaches as evidenced by the success of AlphaFold2 in the most recent Critical Assessment of protein Structure Prediction (CASP14). In this article, we highlight important milestones and progresses in the field of protein structure prediction due to DL-based methods as observed in CASP experiments. We describe advances in various steps of protein structure prediction pipeline viz. protein contact map prediction, protein distogram prediction, protein real-valued distance prediction, and Quality Assessment/refinement. We also highlight some end-to-end DL-based approaches for protein structure prediction approaches. Additionally, as there have been some recent DL-based advances in protein structure determination using Cryo-Electron (Cryo-EM) microscopy based, we also highlight some of the important progress in the field. Finally, we provide an outlook and possible future research directions for DL-based approaches in the protein structure prediction arena.


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