The major rate-limiting step in high-throughput NMR protein structure determination involves the calculation of a reliable initial fold, the elimination of incorrect nuclear Overhauser enhancement (NOE) assignments, and the resolution of NOE assignment ambiguities. We present a robust approach to automatically calculate structures with a backbone coordinate accuracy of 1.0-1.5 Å from datasets in which as much as 80% of the long-range NOE information (i.e., between residues separated by more than five positions in the sequence) is incorrect. The current algorithm differs from previously published methods in that it has been expressly designed to ensure that the results from successive cycles are not biased by the global fold of structures generated in preceding cycles. Consequently, the method is highly error tolerant and is not easily funnelled down an incorrect path in either three-dimensional structure or NOE assignment space. The algorithm incorporates three main features: a linear energy function representation of the NOE restraints to allow maximization of the number of simultaneously satisfied restraints during the course of simulated annealing; a method for handling the presence of multiple possible assignments for each NOE cross-peak which avoids local minima by treating each possible assignment as if it were an independent restraint; and a probabilistic method to permit both inactivation and reactivation of all NOE restraints on the fly during the course of simulated annealing. NOE restraints are never removed permanently, thereby significantly reducing the likelihood of becoming trapped in a false minimum of NOE assignment space. The effectiveness of the algorithm is demonstrated using completely automatically peak-picked experimental NOE data from two proteins: interleukin-4 (136 residues) and cyanovirin-N (101 residues). The limits of the method are explored using simulated data on the 56-residue B1 domain of Streptococcal protein G.
Did you find this post helpful? |
Similar Threads
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
[Question from NMRWiki Q&A forum] Auto assignment of N15 C13 EDIT noesy experments
Auto assignment of N15 C13 EDIT noesy experments
Dear NMR wikiers
could you please suggest any auto assignment web servers online to assign N-15 & C13- EDIT NOESY experiments data?
Thanking you
nmrlearner
News from other NMR forums
0
09-29-2011 07:27 AM
[NMR paper] Automated NMR structure calculation with CYANA.
Automated NMR structure calculation with CYANA.
Related Articles Automated NMR structure calculation with CYANA.
Methods Mol Biol. 2004;278:353-78
Authors: Güntert P
This chapter gives an introduction to automated nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) structure calculation with the program CYANA. Given a sufficiently complete list of assigned chemical shifts and one or several lists of cross-peak positions and columns from two-, three-, or four-dimensional nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY) spectra, the assignment of the NOESY...
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
11-24-2010 09:25 PM
[NMR paper] Protein structure calculation from NMR data.
Protein structure calculation from NMR data.
Related Articles Protein structure calculation from NMR data.
Methods Mol Biol. 2002;173:267-83
Authors: Mal TK, Bagby S, Ikura M
nmrlearner
Journal club
0
11-24-2010 08:49 PM
[Question from NMRWiki Q&A forum] How to keep XPLOR structure calculation from exploding?
How to keep XPLOR structure calculation from exploding?
Trying to calculate a structure using sa.inp script and the energy in the cooling loop increases instead of going down.
In the end there is a message
****&&&& rerun job with smaller timestep (i.e., 0.003)But making the timestep smaller does not help. Could anyone suggest where to look?
edit: I've also commented out my restrains thinking that maybe my noe's are too whacky, but still structure diverges.
protein structure calculation
Hi! every one!
I wanted to get in contact with people solving the structure of protein by using NMR. I am learning the process and i have many basics problem related with the work.
cheers!