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Pocket Similarity: Are α Carbons Enough?
Author(s) -
Howard J. Feldman,
Paul Labute
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of chemical information and modeling
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1549-960X
pISSN - 1549-9596
DOI - 10.1021/ci100210c
Subject(s) - similarity (geometry) , pairwise comparison , cutoff , set (abstract data type) , computer science , nearest neighbor search , value (mathematics) , protein data bank , sensitivity (control systems) , combinatorics , statistics , mathematics , pattern recognition (psychology) , computational biology , protein structure , artificial intelligence , biology , physics , biochemistry , quantum mechanics , electronic engineering , engineering , image (mathematics) , programming language
A novel method for measuring protein pocket similarity was devised, using only the alpha carbon positions of the pocket residues. Pockets were compared pairwise using an exhaustive three-dimensional Calpha common subset search, grouping residues by physicochemical properties. At least five Calpha matches were required for each hit, and distances between corresponding points were fit to an Extreme Value Distribution resulting in a probabilistic score or likelihood for any given superposition. A set of 85 structures from 13 diverse protein families was clustered based on binding sites alone, using this score. It was also successfully used to cluster 25 kinases into a number of subfamilies. Using a test kinase query to retrieve other kinase pockets, it was found that a specificity of 99.2% and sensitivity of 97.5% could be achieved using an appropriate cutoff score. The search itself took from 2 to 10 min on a single 3.4 GHz CPU to search the entire Protein Data Bank (133 800 pockets), depending on the number of hits returned.

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