1 research outputs found
De Novo Determination of Protein Backbone Structure from Residual Dipolar Couplings Using Rosetta
As genome-sequencing projects rapidly increase the database of protein sequences, the gap
between known sequences and known structures continues to grow exponentially, increasing the demand
to accelerate structure determination methods. Residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) are an attractive source
of experimental restraints for NMR structure determination, particularly rapid, high-throughput methods,
because they yield both local and long-range orientational information and can be easily measured and
assigned once the backbone resonances of a protein have been assigned. While very extensive RDC
data sets have been used to determine the structure of ubiquitin, it is unclear to what extent such methods
will generalize to larger proteins with less complete data sets. Here we incorporate experimental RDC
restraints into Rosetta, an ab initio structure prediction method, and demonstrate that the combined algorithm
provides a general method for de novo determination of a variety of protein folds from RDC data. Backbone
structures for multiple proteins up to ∼125 residues in length and spanning a range of topological
complexities are rapidly and reproducibly generated using data sets that are insufficient in isolation to
uniquely determine the protein fold de novo, although ambiguities and errors are observed for proteins
with symmetry about an axis of the alignment tensor. The models generated are not high-resolution structures
completely defined by experimental data but are sufficiently accurate to accelerate traditional high-resolution
NMR structure determination and provide structure-based functional insights
