PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Mining the Protein Data Bank to improve prediction of changes in protein-protein binding.

  • Samuel Coulbourn Flores,
  • Athanasios Alexiou,
  • Anastasios Glaros

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0257614
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 11
p. e0257614

Abstract

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Predicting the effect of mutations on protein-protein interactions is important for relating structure to function, as well as for in silico affinity maturation. The effect of mutations on protein-protein binding energy (ΔΔG) can be predicted by a variety of atomic simulation methods involving full or limited flexibility, and explicit or implicit solvent. Methods which consider only limited flexibility are naturally more economical, and many of them are quite accurate, however results are dependent on the atomic coordinate set used. In this work we perform a sequence and structure based search of the Protein Data Bank to find additional coordinate sets and repeat the calculation on each. The method increases precision and Positive Predictive Value, and decreases Root Mean Square Error, compared to using single structures. Given the ongoing growth of near-redundant structures in the Protein Data Bank, our method will only increase in applicability and accuracy.