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HomoSAR: Bridging comparative protein modeling with quantitative structural activity relationship to design new peptides
Author(s) -
Borkar Mahesh R.,
Pissurlenkar Raghuvir R. S.,
Coutinho Evans C.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of computational chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.907
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1096-987X
pISSN - 0192-8651
DOI - 10.1002/jcc.23436
Subject(s) - peptide , computational biology , quantitative structure–activity relationship , chemistry , steric effects , protein structure , biochemistry , stereochemistry , biology
Peptides play significant roles in the biological world. To optimize activity for a specific therapeutic target, peptide library synthesis is inevitable; which is a time consuming and expensive. Computational approaches provide a promising way to simply elucidate the structural basis in the design of new peptides. Earlier, we proposed a novel methodology termed HomoSAR to gain insight into the structure activity relationships underlying peptides. Based on an integrated approach, HomoSAR uses the principles of homology modeling in conjunction with the quantitative structural activity relationship formalism to predict and design new peptide sequences with the optimum activity. In the present study, we establish that the HomoSAR methodology can be universally applied to all classes of peptides irrespective of sequence length by studying HomoSAR on three peptide datasets viz ., angiotensin‐converting enzyme inhibitory peptides, CAMEL‐s antibiotic peptides, and hAmphiphysin‐1 SH3 domain binding peptides, using a set of descriptors related to the hydrophobic, steric, and electronic properties of the 20 natural amino acids. Models generated for all three datasets have statistically significant correlation coefficients ( r 2 ) and predictiver 2( r pred   2 )and cross validated coefficient ( q LOO   2 ). The daintiness of this technique lies in its simplicity and ability to extract all the information contained in the peptides to elucidate the underlying structure activity relationships. The difficulties of correlating both sequence diversity and variation in length of the peptides with their biological activity can be addressed. The study has been able to identify the preferred or detrimental nature of amino acids at specific positions in the peptide sequences. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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