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A structural homology approach for computational protein design with flexible backbone

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Motivation Structure-based Computational Protein design (CPD) plays a critical role in advancing the field of protein engineering. Using an all-atom energy function, CPD tries to identify amino acid sequences that… Click to show full abstract

Motivation Structure-based Computational Protein design (CPD) plays a critical role in advancing the field of protein engineering. Using an all-atom energy function, CPD tries to identify amino acid sequences that fold into a target structure and ultimately perform a desired function. Energy functions remain however imperfect and injecting relevant information from known structures in the design process should lead to improved designs. Results We introduce Shades, a data-driven CPD method that exploits local structural environments in known protein structures together with energy to guide sequence design, while sampling side-chain and backbone conformations to accommodate mutations. Shades (Structural Homology Algorithm for protein DESign), is based on customized libraries of non-contiguous in-contact amino acid residue motifs. We have tested Shades on a public benchmark of 40 proteins selected from different protein families. When excluding homologous proteins, Shades achieved a protein sequence recovery of 30% and a protein sequence similarity of 46% on average, compared to the PFAM protein family of the target protein. When homologous structures were added, the wild-type sequence recovery rate achieved 93%. Availability Shades source code is available at https://bitbucket.org/satsumaimo/shades as a patch for Rosetta 3.8 with a curated protein structure database and ITEM library creation software. Supplementary Information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Keywords: protein; computational protein; protein design; sequence; structural homology; design

Journal Title: Bioinformatics
Year Published: 2019

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