Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Modeling Non-Peptide Structures ChemBE 414/614 Guest Lecture.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Modeling Non-Peptide Structures ChemBE 414/614 Guest Lecture."— Presentation transcript:

1 Modeling Non-Peptide Structures ChemBE 414/614 Guest Lecture

2 The Big Picture “Form follows function.” Biology involves more than just proteins. We need to understand the “form” of more than just amino acid polymers.

3 Cellular Make-Up

4 Small Molecules Important to model for certain docking and design applications Two categories: – Ligands/Substrates Targets for binding proteins/antibodies (docking problems) Undergo chemistry within active sites (design problems) – Cofactors/Vitamins Do chemistry that AAs can’t do Can be thought of as part of the protein (holo vs. apo)

5 Cofactors Metals – act as strong positive charges for binding highly negative substrates, such as ATP – involved in electron- transfer reactions, such as oxidations/reductions

6 Cofactors Organic Cofactors/Vitamins – hydride transfers – methyl transfers – etc.

7 Modeling Challenges Sampling Scoring

8 The Sampling Problem Cartesian Coordinates vs. Internal Coordinates Not all torsions are created equal. – Linear vs. Branching – Backbone vs. Side Chains – Open vs. Closed Paths (i.e., Rings)

9 The Scoring Problem Physics-based approaches Statistics-based approaches

10 Macromolecules Biopolymers are made from repeating residues. – Protein/peptides Amino acids – DNA/RNA Nucleic acids – Carbohydrates Monosaccharides

11 CARBOHYDRATES Detailed Example

12 The Sampling Problem Oligo/Polypeptides effectively 2 main-chain torsions (φ, ψ) 1 side chain per residue (χs) no rings (w/ 1 exception) linear Oligo/Polysaccharides 2 or 3 main-chain torsions (φ, ψ, ω) multiple side chains per residue (χs) many ring conformers often branched 12 Glycans have many DoF to sample!

13 13 Sugar Topology in Rosetta 1 2 3 φ(2) (1, BB, 1) (1, BB, 2) (1, BB, 3) (1, BB, 4) (1, BB, 5) 4 ψ(2) Drew et al. PLoS ONE 2013, 8, e67051. Different linkages require different.params files. φ & ψ have unique definitions. NU records were added. CUT_BONDS and virtual atoms are required. VO5 VC1 reducing end maltotriose α- D -Glcp(1→4)-α- D -Glcp(1→4)- D -Glcp

14 Main-Chain Flexibility SmallMoverRingConformationMover 14

15 Branching & Conjugation N-linked 14-mer Glycolipid 15

16 The Scoring Problem 16 Grant & Woods Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 2014, 28C, 47–55.http://www.glycosciences.de/tools/glytorsion/ all φ/ψ from PDB (~42,000) -α- D -Glcp-(1→4)-α- D -Glcp- φ/ψ from PDB (~1,200) -α- D -Glcp-(1→4)-α- D -Glcp- φ/ψ from PDB (~1,200) φ ψ φ ψ 2-equatorial 3-axial 4-equatorial β (1′-equatorial) 2-axial 3-equatorial 4-axial α (1′-axial)

17 Tour of Residue Diversity Non-Canonical AAs (NCAAs)Problems & Solutions use unique topology files use unique rotamer libraries use peptide backbone- sampling use Ramachandran statistics can’t rely on Dunbrack statistics

18 Tour of Residue Diversity Post-Translational Modifications Problems & Solutions use patch files might be able to re-use rotamer libraries use peptide backbone-sampling use Ramachandran statistics might be able to use Dunbrack statistics potential difficult electrostatics

19 Tour of Residue Diversity D -Amino AcidsProblems & Solutions use opposite rotamers use peptide backbone- sampling use opposite Ramachandran statistics use opposite Dunbrack statistics

20 Tour of Residue Diversity β-Amino AcidsProblems & Solutions include extra backbone torsion use same rotamer libraries

21 Tour of Residue Diversity PeptoidsProblems & Solutions must use new rotamer libraries cis and trans ω must be allowed


Download ppt "Modeling Non-Peptide Structures ChemBE 414/614 Guest Lecture."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google