Atomic-accuracy prediction of protein loop structures through an RNA-inspired ansatz
Rhiju Das

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel stepwise assembly method inspired by RNA modeling that predicts protein loop structures at atomic resolution with high accuracy, outperforming previous methods in benchmark tests.
Contribution
The study presents a new enumeration-based protocol for protein loop prediction that achieves near-atomic accuracy and demonstrates its effectiveness on challenging biological cases.
Findings
SWA recovers crystallographic conformations with sub-Angstrom accuracy for most loops.
SWA outperforms KIC modeling in benchmark tests.
Successful blind tests include the first atomic-resolution model of a protein/RNA interface.
Abstract
Consistently predicting biopolymer structure at atomic resolution from sequence alone remains a difficult problem, even for small sub-segments of large proteins. Such loop prediction challenges, which arise frequently in comparative modeling and protein design, can become intractable as loop lengths exceed 10 residues and if surrounding side-chain conformations are erased. This article introduces a modeling strategy based on a 'stepwise ansatz', recently developed for RNA modeling, which posits that any realistic all-atom molecular conformation can be built up by residue-by-residue stepwise enumeration. When harnessed to a dynamic-programming-like recursion in the Rosetta framework, the resulting stepwise assembly (SWA) protocol enables enumerative sampling of a 12 residue loop at a significant but achievable cost of thousands of CPU-hours. In a previously established benchmark, SWA…
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