67 research outputs found

    Sharing data from molecular simulations

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    Given the need for modern researchers to produce open, reproducible scientific output, the lack of standards and best practices for sharing data and workflows used to produce and analyze molecular dynamics (MD) simulations has become an important issue in the field. There are now multiple well-established packages to perform molecular dynamics simulations, often highly tuned for exploiting specific classes of hardware, each with strong communities surrounding them, but with very limited interoperability/transferability options. Thus, the choice of the software package often dictates the workflow for both simulation production and analysis. The level of detail in documenting the workflows and analysis code varies greatly in published work, hindering reproducibility of the reported results and the ability for other researchers to build on these studies. An increasing number of researchers are motivated to make their data available, but many challenges remain in order to effectively share and reuse simulation data. To discuss these and other issues related to best practices in the field in general, we organized a workshop in November 2018 (https://bioexcel.eu/events/workshop-on-sharing-data-from-molecular-simulations/). Here, we present a brief overview of this workshop and topics discussed. We hope this effort will spark further conversation in the MD community to pave the way toward more open, interoperable, and reproducible outputs coming from research studies using MD simulations

    GPC3-Unc5 receptor complex structure and role in cell migration

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    Neural migration is a critical step during brain development that requires the interactions of cell-surface guidance receptors. Cancer cells often hijack these mechanisms to disseminate. Here, we reveal crystal structures of Uncoordinated-5 receptor D (Unc5D) in complex with morphogen receptor glypican-3 (GPC3), forming an octameric glycoprotein complex. In the complex, four Unc5D molecules pack into an antiparallel bundle, flanked by four GPC3 molecules. Central glycan-glycan interactions are formed by N-linked glycans emanating from GPC3 (N241 in human) and C-mannosylated tryptophans of the Unc5D thrombospondin-like domains. MD simulations, mass spectrometry and structure-based mutants validate the crystallographic data. Anti-GPC3 nanobodies enhance or weaken Unc5-GPC3 binding and, together with mutant proteins, show that Unc5/GPC3 guide migrating pyramidal neurons in the mouse cortex, and cancer cells in an embryonic xenograft neuroblastoma model. The results demonstrate a conserved structural mechanism of cell guidance, where finely balanced Unc5-GPC3 interactions regulate cell migration

    Towards an interactive tool for the protein docking

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    Même si le docking protéine-protéine devient un outil incontournable pour répondre aux problématiques biologiques actuelles, il reste cependant deux difficultés inhérentes aux methodes actuelles: 1) la majorité de ces méthodes ne considère pas les possibles déformations internes des protéines durant leur association. 2) Il n'est pas toujours simple de traduire les informations issues de la littérature ou d'expérimentations en contraintes intégrables aux programmes de docking. Nous avons donc tenté de développer une approche permettant d'améliorer les programmes de docking existants. Pour cela nous nous sommes inspirés des méthodologies mises en place sur des cas concrets traités durant cette thèse. D'abord, à travers la création du complexe ERBIN PDZ/Smad3 MH2, nous avons pu tester l'utilité de la Dynamique Moléculaire en Solvant Explicite (DMSE) pour mettre en évidence des résidus importants pour l'interaction. Puis, nous avons étendu cette recherche en utilisant divers serveurs de docking puis la DMSE pour cibler un résultat consensus. Enfin, nous avons essayé le raffinage par DMSE sur une cible du challenge CAPRI et comparé les résultats avec des simulations courtes de Monte-Carlo. La dernière partie de cette thèse portait sur le développement d'un nouvel outil de visualisation de la surface moléculaire. Ce programme, nommé MetaMol, permet de visualiser un nouveau type de surface moléculaire: la Skin Surface Moléculaire. La distribution des calculs à la fois sur le processeur de l'ordinateur (CPU) et sur ceux de la carte graphique (GPU) entraine une diminution des temps de calcul autorisant la visualisation, en temps réel, des déformations de la surface moléculaire.Protein-protein docking has become an extremely important challenge in biology, however, there remain two inherent difficulties: 1) most docking methods do not consider possible internal deformations of the proteins during their association; 2) it is not always easy to translate information from the literature or from experiments into constraints suitable for use in protein docking algorithms. Following these conclusions, we have developed an approach to improve existing docking programs. Firstly, through modelling the ERBIN PDZ / Smad3 MH2 complex, we have tested the utility of Molecular Dynamics with Explicit Solvent (MDSE) for elucidating the key residues in an interaction. We then extended this research by using several docking servers and the DMSE simulations to obtain a consensus result. Finally, we have explored the use of DMSE refinement on one of the targets from the CAPRI experiment and we have compared those results with those from short Monte-Carlo simulations. Another aspect of this thesis concerns the development of a novel molecular surface visualisation tool. This program, named MetaMol, allows the visualisation of a new type of molecular surface: the Molecular Skin Surface. Distributing the surface calculation between a computer's central processing unit (CPU) and its graphics card (GPU) allows deformations of the molecular surface to be calculated and visualised in real time

    Vers une nouvelle stratégie pour l'assemblage interactif de macromolécules

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    Protein-protein docking has become an extremely important challenge in biology, however, there remain two inherent difficulties: 1) most docking methods do not consider possible internal deformations of the proteins during their association; 2) it is not always easy to translate information from the literature or from experiments into constraints suitable for use in protein docking algorithms. Following these conclusions, we have developed an approach to improve existing docking programs. Firstly, through modelling the ERBIN PDZ / Smad3 MH2 complex, we have tested the utility of Molecular Dynamics with Explicit Solvent (MDSE) for elucidating the key residues in an interaction. We then extended this research by using several docking servers and the DMSE simulations to obtain a consensus result. Finally, we have explored the use of DMSE refinement on one of the targets from the CAPRI experiment and we have compared those results with those from short Monte-Carlo simulations. Another aspect of this thesis concerns the development of a novel molecular surface visualisation tool. This program, named MetaMol, allows the visualisation of a new type of molecular surface: the Molecular Skin Surface. Distributing the surface calculation between a computer's central processing unit (CPU) and its graphics card (GPU) allows deformations of the molecular surface to be calculated and visualised in real time.Même si le docking protéine-protéine devient un outil incontournable pour répondre aux problématiques biologiques actuelles, il reste cependant deux difficultés inhérentes aux méthodes actuelles: 1) la majorité de ces méthodes ne considère pas les possibles déformations internes des protéines durant leur association. 2) Il n'est pas toujours simple de traduire les informations issues de la littérature ou d'expérimentations en contraintes intégrables aux programmes de docking. Nous avons donc tenté de développer une approche permettant d'améliorer les programmes de docking existants. Pour cela nous nous sommes inspirés des méthodologies mises en place sur des cas concrets traités durant cette thèse. D'abord, à travers la création du complexe ERBIN PDZ/Smad3 MH2, nous avons pu tester l'utilité de la Dynamique Moléculaire en Solvant Explicite (DMSE) pour mettre en évidence des résidus importants pour l'interaction. Puis, nous avons étendu cette recherche en utilisant divers serveurs de docking puis la DMSE pour cibler un résultat consensus. Enfin, nous avons essayé le raffinage par DMSE sur une cible du challenge CAPRI et comparé les résultats avec des simulations courtes de Monte-Carlo. La dernière partie de cette thèse portait sur le développement d'un nouvel outil de visualisation de la surface moléculaire. Ce programme, nommé MetaMol, permet de visualiser un nouveau type de surface moléculaire: la Skin Surface Moléculaire. La distribution des calculs à la fois sur le processeur de l'ordinateur (CPU) et sur ceux de la carte graphique (GPU) entraine une diminution des temps de calcul autorisant la visualisation, en temps réel, des déformations de la surface moléculaire

    Molecular simulations of gram-negative bacterial membranes: a vignette of some recent successes

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    In the following review we use recent examples from the literature to discuss progress in the area of atomistic and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations of selected bacterial membranes and proteins, with a particular focus on Gram-negative bacteria. As structural biology continues to provide increasingly high-resolution data on the proteins that reside within these membranes, simulations have an important role to play in linking these data with the dynamical behavior and function of these proteins. In particular, in the last few years there has been significant progress in addressing the issue of biochemical complexity of bacterial membranes such that the heterogeneity of the lipid and protein components of these membranes are now being incorporated into molecular-level models. Thus, in future we can look forward to complementary data from structural biology and molecular simulations combining to provide key details of structure-dynamics-function relationships in bacterial membranes

    MetaMol: High-quality visualization of molecular skin surface

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    International audienceModeling and visualizing molecular surfaces is an important and challenging task in bioinformatics. Such surfaces play an essential role in better understanding the chemical and physical properties of molecules. However, constructing and displaying molecular surfaces requires complex algorithms. In this article we introduce MetaMol, a new program that generates high-quality images in interactive time. In contrast with existing software that discretizes the surface with triangles or grids, our program is based on a GPU accelerated ray-casting algorithm that directly uses the piecewise-defined algebraic equation of the molecular skin surface. As a result, both better performances and higher quality are obtained

    Structures of the EphA2 receptor at the membrane: Role of lipid interactions

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    Ephs are transmembrane receptors that mediate cell-cell signaling. The N-terminal ectodomain binds ligands and enables receptor clustering, which activates the intracellular kinase. Relatively little is known about the function of the membrane-proximal fibronectin domain 2 (FN2) of the ectodomain. Multiscale molecular dynamics simulations reveal that FN2 interacts with lipid bilayers via a site comprising K441, R443, R465, Q462, S464, S491, W467, F490, and P459–461. FN2 preferentially binds anionic lipids, a preference that is reduced in the mutant K441E + R443E. We confirm these results by measuring the binding of wild-type and mutant FN2 domains to lipid vesicles. In simulations of the complete EphA2 ectodomain plus the transmembrane region, we show that FN2 anchors the otherwise flexible ectodomain at the surface of the bilayer. Altogether, our data suggest that FN2 serves a dual function of interacting with anionic lipids and constraining the structure of the EphA2 ectodomain to adopt membrane-proximal configurations
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