Home >

news ヘルプ

論文・著書情報


タイトル
和文: 
英文:Re-docking scheme for generating near-native protein complexes by assembling residue interaction fingerprints 
著者
和文: 内古閑 伸之, 松崎 由理, 大上 雅史, 広川 貴次, 秋山 泰.  
英文: Nobuyuki Uchikoga, Yuri Matsuzaki, Masahito Ohue, Takatsugu Hirokawa, Yutaka Akiyama.  
言語 English 
掲載誌/書名
和文: 
英文:PLOS ONE 
巻, 号, ページ Vol. 8    No. 7    e69365
出版年月 2013年7月16日 
出版者
和文: 
英文: 
会議名称
和文: 
英文: 
開催地
和文: 
英文: 
公式リンク https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0069365
 
DOI https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0069365
アブストラクト Interaction profile method is a useful method for processing rigid-body docking. After the docking process, the resulting set of docking poses could be classified by calculating similarities among them using these interaction profiles to search for near-native poses. However, there are some cases where the near-native poses are not included in this set of docking poses even when the bound-state structures are used. Therefore, we have developed a method for generating near-native docking poses by introducing a re-docking process. We devised a method for calculating the profile of interaction fingerprints by assembling protein complexes after determining certain core-protein complexes. For our analysis, we used 44 bound-state protein complexes selected from the ZDOCK benchmark dataset ver. 2.0, including some protein pairs none of which generated near-native poses in the docking process. Consequently, after the re-docking process we obtained profiles of interaction fingerprints, some of which yielded near-native poses. The re-docking process involved searching for possible docking poses in a restricted area using the profile of interaction fingerprints. If the profile includes interactions identical to those in the native complex, we obtained near-native docking poses. Accordingly, near-native poses were obtained for all bound-state protein complexes examined here. Application of interaction fingerprints to the re-docking process yielded structures with more native interactions, even when a docking pose, obtained following the initial docking process, contained only a small number of native amino acid interactions. Thus, utilization of the profile of interaction fingerprints in the re-docking process yielded more near-native poses.

©2007 Tokyo Institute of Technology All rights reserved.