DeepMind presented remarkably accurate predictions at the recent CASP14 protein structure prediction assessment conference. We explored network architectures incorporating related ideas and obtained the best performance with a three-track network in which information at the 1D sequence level, the 2D distance map level, and the 3D coordinate level is successively transformed and integrated. The three-track network produces structure predictions with accuracies approaching those of DeepMind in CASP14, enables the rapid solution of challenging X-ray crystallography and cryo-EM structure modeling problems, and provides insights into the functions of proteins of currently unknown structure. The network also enables rapid generation of accurate protein-protein complex models from sequence information alone, short circuiting traditional approaches which require modeling of individual subunits followed by docking. We make the method available to the scientific community to speed biological research.
Intramolecular quenching of tryptophan fluorescence by protein functional groups was studied in a series of rigid cyclic hexapeptides containing a single tryptophan. The solution structure of the canonical peptide c[D-PpYTFWF] (pY, phosphotyrosine) was determined in aqueous solution by 1D- and 2D-(1)H NMR techniques. The peptide backbone has a single predominant conformation. The tryptophan side chain has three chi(1) rotamers: a major chi(1) = -60 degrees rotamer with a population of 0.67, and two minor rotamers of equal population. The peptides have three fluorescence lifetimes of about 3.8, 1.8, and 0.3 ns with relative amplitudes that agree with the chi(1) rotamer populations determined by NMR. The major 3.8-ns lifetime component is assigned to the chi(1) = -60 degrees rotamer. The multiple fluorescence lifetimes are attributed to differences among rotamers in the rate of excited-state electron transfer to peptide bonds. Electron-transfer rates were calculated for the six preferred side chain rotamers using Marcus theory. A simple model with reasonable assumptions gives excellent agreement between observed and calculated lifetimes for the 3.8- and 1.8-ns lifetimes and assigns the 1.8-ns lifetime component to the chi(1) = 180 degrees rotamer. Substitution of phenylalanine by lysine on either side of tryptophan has no effect on fluorescence quantum yield or lifetime, indicating that intramolecular excited-state proton transfer catalyzed by the epsilon-ammonium does not occur in these peptides.
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