CECAM workshop on Flexible Macromolecular Docking
April 28-30, 2004
Lyon, France

 
 

How to efficiently account for side chain flexibility and global motions
during docking

Martin Zacharias, International University Bremen,
 

Most current docking approaches to predict the binding geometry of protein-protein complexes use rigid protein partner structures. However, protein complex formation can involve both local conformational changes of side chains and loops at the protein-protein interface and global conformational relaxation of the protein partners. We have developed a docking approach that is based on energy minimization of translational and rotational degrees of freedom of protein partners and on a reduced protein representation allowing efficient search for docking minima. A multicopy approach is used to select the most favourable side-chain conformation at the protein-protein interface during the docking process [1]. To approximately account for possible global conformational adaptation a method has been developed that allows to relax the protein structure in pre-calculated flexible degrees of freedom (soft modes) during docking [2]. Such flexible modes can for example be obtained from molecular dynamics simulations or on the level of a reduced protein representation by employing an energy function that depends on the local protein density. Application of the approaches to test systems will be presented.

[1] Zacharias, M. 2003. Protein-protein docking with a reduced protein model accounting for side chain flexibility. Protein Sci. 12, 1271.
[2] Zacharias, M. 2004. Rapid protein-ligand docking using soft modes from molecular dynamics simulations to account for protein deformability:binding of FK506 to FKBP. Proteins 54, 759.

 

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