The traditional computational modeling of protein structure, dynamics, and interactions remains difficult for many protein systems. It is mostly due to the size of protein conformational spaces and required simulation time scales that are still too large to be studied in atomistic detail. Lowering the level of protein representation from all-atom to coarse-grained opens up new possibilities for studying protein systems. In this review we provide an overview of coarse-grained models focusing on their design, including choices of representation, models of energy functions, sampling of conformational space, and applications in the modeling of protein structure, dynamics, and interactions. A more detailed description is given for applications of coarse-grained models suitable for efficient combinations with all-atom simulations in multiscale modeling strategies.
The Rosetta software suite for macromolecular modeling, docking, and design is widely used in pharmaceutical, industrial, academic, non-profit, and government laboratories. Despite its broad modeling capabilities, Rosetta remains consistently among leading software suites when compared to other methods created for highly specialized protein modeling and design tasks. Developed for over two decades by a global community of over 60 laboratories, Rosetta has undergone multiple refactorings, and now comprises over three million lines of code. Here we discuss methods developed in the last five years in Rosetta, involving the latest protocols for structure prediction; protein-protein and protein-small molecule docking; protein structure and interface design; loop modeling; the incorporation of various types of experimental data; modeling of peptides, antibodies and proteins in the immune system, nucleic acids, non-standard chemistries, carbohydrates, and membrane proteins. We briefly discuss improvements to the energy function, user interfaces, and usability of the software. Rosetta is available at www.rosettacommons.org.
The Rosetta de novo structure prediction and loop modeling protocols begin with coarse grained Monte Carlo searches in which the moves are based on short fragments extracted from a database of known structures. Here we describe a new object oriented program for picking fragments that greatly extends the functionality of the previous program (nnmake) and opens the door for new approaches to structure modeling. We provide a detailed description of the code design and architecture, highlighting its modularity, and new features such as extensibility, total control over the fragment picking workflow and scoring system customization. We demonstrate that the program provides at least as good building blocks for ab-initio structure prediction as the previous program, and provide examples of the wide range of applications that are now accessible.
In this contribution, we present an algorithm for protein backbone reconstruction that comprises very high computational efficiency with high accuracy. Reconstruction of the main chain atomic coordinates from the alpha carbon trace is a common task in protein modeling, including de novo structure prediction, comparative modeling, and processing experimental data. The method employed in this work follows the main idea of some earlier approaches to the problem. The details and careful design of the present approach are new and lead to the algorithm that outperforms all commonly used earlier applications. BBQ (Backbone Building from Quadrilaterals) program has been extensively tested both on native structures as well as on near-native decoy models and compared with the different available existing methods. Obtained results provide a comprehensive benchmark of existing tools and evaluate their applicability to a large scale modeling using a reduced representation of protein conformational space. The BBQ package is available for downloading from our website at http://biocomp.chem.uw.edu.pl/services/BBQ/. This webpage also provides a user manual that describes BBQ functions in detail.
Monte Carlo studies of the thermodynamics and kinetics of reduced protein models: Application to small helical, β, and α/β proteins Entropy sampling Monte Carlo, the replica method, and the classical Metropolis scheme were applied in numerical studies of the collapse transition in a simple face-centered cubic lattice polymer. The force field of the model consists of pairwise, contact-type, long-range interactions and a short-range potential based on the -sheet definition assumed in the model. The ability to find the lowest energy conformation by various Monte Carlo methods and the computational cost associated with each was examined. It is shown that all of the methods generally provide the same picture of the collapse transition. However, the most complete thermodynamic description of the transition derives from the results of entropy sampling Monte Carlo simulations, but this is the most time-consuming method. The replica method is shown to be the most effective and efficient in searching for the lowest energy conformation. The possible consequences of these findings for the development of simulation strategies for the folding of model proteins are discussed briefly.
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