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Backbone Motion in Protein Design

Backbone Motion in Protein Design. Andrew Leaver-Fay University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill David O’Brien, Kimberly Noonan, Jack Snoeyink. Protein Design. Create an amino acid sequence that adopts a desired conformation Binds a desired small molecule Catalyses a desired reaction.

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Backbone Motion in Protein Design

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  1. Backbone Motion in Protein Design Andrew Leaver-Fay University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill David O’Brien, Kimberly Noonan, Jack Snoeyink

  2. Protein Design • Create an amino acid sequence that adopts a desired conformation • Binds a desired small molecule • Catalyses a desired reaction

  3. Dezymer From Homme Hellinga’s Lab • Use backbone of a known protein as a scaffold • Hang different sidechains from original C • Sample the sidechain conformation space • Rotamer library • Sample the ligand conformations inside binding pocket

  4. Dezymer • Combinatorial optimization • Find the best combination of rotamers to pack around the ligand of interest. • Dead End Elimination • Technique for pairwise-decomposable energy functions

  5. Why Move Backbones? • We know backbones move. Courtesy of Jane Richardson Mooers et.al. (2003) JMB 332, 741-56

  6. Why Move Backbones? • Increase power of design tools • Small motions can allow more rotamers to fit at a given location  Now search a larger sequence space. • Understand more completely the result of sequence selection on backbone motion

  7. Tools for Backbone Motion • PROBIK @ UNC • Small motions for short backbone segments • Offers • Motion Derivative Vectors • Matlab Interface

  8. Incorporating Backbone Motion • Generate Backbones Offline • Feed them into Dezymer • Goal: Incorporate motions into DEE itself

  9. Success of Dezymer • TNT Binding Protein • 2 nM Kd • R3 • Ribose Binding Protein (2dri) scaffold • Relaxed by molecular dynamics • Forces two phenylalanine rings in the binding pocket

  10. R3 – Case Study • Model of R3s structure is imperfect • Multiple Bad (>0.4 A) Overlaps • Phenylalanine rings un-stacked.

  11. R3 – Case Study • Use backbone motion to better explain R3’s success • Suggest sequence modifications for more powerful receptors

  12. R3 – PHE 190 • Small motion from 189 N-Ca-C Bond angle

  13. R3 – Preliminary Results • Dezymer result after PHE 190 BB Motion

  14. R3 – PHE 15 / PRO 237

  15. R3 – SER 215 • Ramachandran Outlier in Original Conformation

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