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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on September 28, 2007.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.107.114280
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Biophysical Journal 94:918-928 (2008)
© 2008 The Biophysical Society

M-TASSER: An Algorithm for Protein Quaternary Structure Prediction

Huiling Chen and Jeffrey Skolnick

Center for the Study of Systems Biology, School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Jeffrey Skolnick, Tel.: 404-407-8975; Fax: 404-385-7478; E-mail: skolnick{at}gatech.edu.

In a cell, it has been estimated that each protein on average interacts with roughly 10 others, resulting in tens of thousands of proteins known or suspected to have interaction partners; of these, only a tiny fraction have solved protein structures. To partially address this problem, we have developed M-TASSER, a hierarchical method to predict protein quaternary structure from sequence that involves template identification by multimeric threading, followed by multimer model assembly and refinement. The final models are selected by structure clustering. M-TASSER has been tested on a benchmark set comprising 241 dimers having templates with weak sequence similarity and 246 without multimeric templates in the dimer library. Of the total of 207 targets predicted to interact as dimers, 165 (80%) were correctly assigned as interacting with a true positive rate of 68% and a false positive rate of 17%. The initial best template structures have an average root mean-square deviation to native of 5.3, 6.7, and 7.4 Å for the monomer, interface, and dimer structures. The final model shows on average a root mean-square deviation improvement of 1.3, 1.3, and 1.5 Å over the initial template structure for the monomer, interface, and dimer structures, with refinement evident for 87% of the cases. Thus, we have developed a promising approach to predict full-length quaternary structure for proteins that have weak sequence similarity to proteins of solved quaternary structure.




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Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USAHome page
M. Brylinski and J. Skolnick
A threading-based method (FINDSITE) for ligand-binding site prediction and functional annotation
PNAS, January 8, 2008; 105(1): 129 - 134.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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