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Automatch: Target‐binding protein design and enzyme design by automatic pinpointing potential active sites in available protein scaffolds
Author(s) -
Zhang Changsheng,
Lai Luhua
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
proteins: structure, function, and bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.699
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0134
pISSN - 0887-3585
DOI - 10.1002/prot.24009
Subject(s) - active site , protein design , protein engineering , computational biology , target protein , benchmark (surveying) , computer science , scaffold protein , enzyme , combinatorial chemistry , biochemistry , chemistry , biology , protein structure , signal transduction , gene , geodesy , geography
Proteins perform their functions mainly via active sites, whereas other parts of the proteins comprise the scaffolds, which support the active sites. One strategy for protein functional design is transplanting active sites, such as catalytic sites for enzyme or binding hot spots for protein-protein interactions, onto a new scaffold. AutoMatch is a new program designed for efficiently elucidating suitable scaffolds and potential sites on the scaffolds. Backrub motions are used to treat backbone flexibility during the design process. A step-by-step checking strategy and cluster-representation examination strategy were developed to solve the large combinatorial problem for the matching of active-site conformations. In addition, a grid-based binding energy scoring method was used to filter the solutions. An enzyme design benchmark and a protein-protein interaction design benchmark were built to test the algorithm. AutoMatch could identify the hot spots in the nonbinding protein and rank them within the top five results for 8 of 10 target-binding protein design cases. In addition, among the 15 enzymes tested, AutoMatch can identify the catalytic active sites in the apoprotein and rank them within the top five results for 13 cases. AutoMatch was also tested for screening scaffold library in designing binding proteins targeting influenza hemagglutinin, HIV gp120, and epidermal growth factor receptor kinase, respectively. AutoMatch, and the two test sets, ActApo and ActFree, are available for noncommercial applications at http://mdl.ipc.pku.edu.cn/cgi-bin/down.cgi.

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