Protein chemical shifts have long been used by NMR spectroscopists to assist with secondary structure assignment and to provide useful distance and torsion angle constraint data for structure determination. One of the most widely used methods for secondary structure identification is called the Chemical Shift Index (CSI). The CSI method uses a simple digital chemical shift filter to locate secondary structures along the protein chain using backbone 13C and 1H chemical shifts. While the CSI method is simple to use and easy to implement, it is only about 75â??80Â*% accurate. Here we describe a significantly improved version of the CSI (2.0) that uses machine-learning techniques to combine all six backbone chemical shifts (13Cα, 13Cβ, 13C, 15N, 1HN, 1Hα) with sequence-derived features to perform far more accurate secondary structure identification. Our tests indicate that CSI 2.0 achieved an average identification accuracy (Q3) of 90.56Â*% for a training set of 181 proteins in a repeated tenfold cross-validation and 89.35Â*% for a test set of 59 proteins. This represents a significant improvement over other state-of-the-art chemical shift-based methods. In particular, the level of performance of CSI 2.0 is equal to that of standard methods, such as DSSP and STRIDE, used to identify secondary structures via 3D coordinate data. This suggests that CSI 2.0 could be used both in providing accurate NMR constraint data in the early stages of protein structure determination as well as in defining secondary structure locations in the final protein model(s). A CSI 2.0 web server (http://csi.wishartlab.com) is available for submitting the input queries for secondary structure identification.
[NMR paper] Practical use of chemical shift databases for protein solid-state NMR: 2D chemical shift maps and amino-acid assignment with secondary-structure information.
Practical use of chemical shift databases for protein solid-state NMR: 2D chemical shift maps and amino-acid assignment with secondary-structure information.
Practical use of chemical shift databases for protein solid-state NMR: 2D chemical shift maps and amino-acid assignment with secondary-structure information.
J Biomol NMR. 2013 Apr 28;
Authors: Fritzsching KJ, Yang Y, Schmidt-Rohr K, Hong M
Abstract
We introduce a Python-based program that utilizes the large database of (13)C and (15)N chemical shifts in the Biological Magnetic...
nmrlearner
Journal club
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04-30-2013 10:21 PM
Improved chemical shift prediction by Rosetta conformational sampling
Improved chemical shift prediction by Rosetta conformational sampling
Abstract Chemical shift frequencies represent a time-average of all the conformational states populated by a protein. Thus, chemical shift prediction programs based on sequence and database analysis yield higher accuracy for rigid rather than flexible protein segments. Here we show that the prediction accuracy can be significantly improved by averaging over an ensemble of structures, predicted solely from amino acid sequence with the Rosetta program. This approach to chemical shift and structure prediction has the...
nmrlearner
Journal club
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09-29-2012 11:56 AM
RCI - Random Coil Index for predicting protein flexibility from chemical shifts
RCI website
RCI method predicts protein flexibility by calculating the Random Coil Index from backbone chemical shifts and predicting values of model-free order parameters as well as per-residue RMSF of NMR and MD ensembles from the Random Coil Index.
The key advantages of this protocol over existing methods of studying protein flexibility are (i) it does not require prior knowledge of a protein's tertiary structure, (ii) it is not sensitive to the protein's overall tumbling and (iii) it does not require additional NMR measurements beyond the standard experiments for backbone...
markber
NMR software
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02-02-2012 11:36 PM
SHIFTX2: significantly improved protein chemical shift prediction
SHIFTX2: significantly improved protein chemical shift prediction
Abstract A new computer program, called SHIFTX2, is described which is capable of rapidly and accurately calculating diamagnetic 1H, 13C and 15N chemical shifts from protein coordinate data. Compared to its predecessor (SHIFTX) and to other existing protein chemical shift prediction programs, SHIFTX2 is substantially more accurate (up to 26% better by correlation coefficient with an RMS error that is up to 3.3Ã? smaller) than the next best performing program. It also provides significantly more coverage (up to 10% more),...
[NMR paper] The chemical shift index: a fast and simple method for the assignment of protein seco
The chemical shift index: a fast and simple method for the assignment of protein secondary structure through NMR spectroscopy.
Related Articles The chemical shift index: a fast and simple method for the assignment of protein secondary structure through NMR spectroscopy.
Biochemistry. 1992 Feb 18;31(6):1647-51
Authors: Wishart DS, Sykes BD, Richards FM
Previous studies by Wishart et al. have demonstrated that 1H NMR chemical shifts are strongly dependent on the character and nature of protein secondary structure. In particular, it has been...