학술논문

ModFlex: Towards Function Focused Protein Modeling
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Molecular Biology. 433(11)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biological Sciences
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Generic health relevance
Humans
Lactoferrin
Models
Molecular
Protein Conformation
Proteins
Software
Structural Homology
Protein
User-Computer Interface
homology-based modeling
structure modeling
structure prediction
structural flexibility
functional substates
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Microbiology
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
There is a wide, and continuously widening, gap between the number of proteins known only by their amino acid sequence versus those structurally characterized by direct experiment. To close this gap, we mostly rely on homology-based inference and modeling to reason about the structures of the uncharacterized proteins by using structures of homologous proteins as templates. With the rapidly growing size of the Protein Data Bank, there are often multiple choices of templates, including multiple sets of coordinates from the same protein. The substantial conformational differences observed between different experimental structures of the same protein often reflect function related structural flexibility. Thus, depending on the questions being asked, using distant homologs, or coordinate sets with lower resolution but solved in the appropriate functional form, as templates may be more informative. The ModFlex server (https://modflex.org/) addresses this seldom mentioned gap in the standard homology modeling approach by providing the user with an interface with multiple options and tools to select the most relevant template and explore the range of structural diversity in the available templates. ModFlex is closely integrated with a range of other programs and servers developed in our group for the analysis and visualization of protein structural flexibility and divergence.