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Biophysical Journal 87:171-181 (2004)
© 2004 The Biophysical Society

Database-Derived Potentials Dependent on Protein Size for In Silico Folding and Design

Yves Dehouck, Dimitri Gilis and Marianne Rooman

Bioinformatique Génomique et Structurale, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Yves Dehouck, Bioinformatique Génomique et Structurale, Université Libre de Bruxelles, CP 165/61, Av. Fr. Roosevelt 50, 1050 Brussels, Belgium. Tel.: 32-2-650-2067; Fax: 32-2-650-3575; E-mail: ydehouck{at}ulb.ac.be.

Knowledge-based potentials are widely used in simulations of protein folding, structure prediction, and protein design. Their advantages include limited computational requirements and the ability to deal with low-resolution protein models compatible with long-scale simulations. Their drawbacks comprehend their dependence on specific features of the dataset from which they are derived, such as the size of the proteins it contains, and their physical meaning is still a subject of debate. We address these issues by probing the theoretical validity of these potentials as mean-force potentials that take the solvent implicitly into account and involve entropic contributions due to atomic degrees of freedom and solvation. The dependence on the size of the system is checked on distance-dependent amino acid pair potentials, derived from six protein structure sets containing proteins of increasing length N. For large inter-residue distances, they are found to display the theoretically predicted 1/N behavior weighted by a factor depending on the boundaries and the compressibility of the system. For short distances, different trends are observed according to the nature of the residue pairs and their ability to form, for example, electrostatic, cation-{pi} or {pi}{pi} interactions, or hydrophobic packing. The results of this analysis are used to devise a novel protein size-dependent distance potential, which displays an improved performance in discriminating native sequence-structure matches among decoy models.




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