Land Management for Socially Integrative Cities in Europe

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Konferenzbericht/Sammelband/GutachtenBeitrag in Buch/Sammelband/GutachtenBeigetragenBegutachtung

Abstract

Predicting the binding mode of flexible polypeptides to proteins is an important task that falls outside the domain of applicability of most small molecule and protein−protein docking tools. Here, we test the small molecule flexible ligand docking program Glide on a set of 19 non-α-helical peptides and systematically improve pose prediction accuracy by enhancing Glide sampling for flexible polypeptides. In addition, scoring of the poses was improved by post-processing with physics-based implicit solvent MM- GBSA calculations. Using the best RMSD among the top 10 scoring poses as a metric, the success rate (RMSD ≤ 2.0 Å for the interface backbone atoms) increased from 21% with default Glide SP settings to 58% with the enhanced peptide sampling and scoring protocol in the case of redocking to the native protein structure. This approaches the accuracy of the recently developed Rosetta FlexPepDock method (63% success for these 19 peptides) while being over 100 times faster. Cross-docking was performed for a subset of cases where an unbound receptor structure was available, and in that case, 40% of peptides were docked successfully. We analyze the results and find that the optimized polypeptide protocol is most accurate for extended peptides of limited size and number of formal charges, defining a domain of applicability for this approach.

Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
TitelTowards Socially Integrative Cities – Perspectives on Urban Sustainability in Europe and China
Seiten83-102
Seitenumfang20
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2021
Peer-Review-StatusJa

Externe IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-3856-7729/work/142239641
ORCID /0000-0003-2742-5183/work/142252422
ORCID /0000-0003-1479-4270/work/142253653
Mendeley e31c6a62-c481-3173-b0ac-10da32222841

Schlagworte

Schlagwörter

  • Urban Sustainability, Socially Integrative Cities