2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session U18: Focus Session: Polymer Collapse and Protein Folding
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: 210
Sponsoring
Units:
GSNP DPOLY
Chair: Tom Truskett, University of Texas at Austin
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.U18.1
Abstract: U18.00001 : Folding peptides and proteins with all-atom physics: methods and applications
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
M. Scott Shell
(Department of Chemical Engineering, University of California Santa Barbara)
Computational methods offer powerful tools for investigating proteins and
peptides at the molecular-level; however, it has proven challenging to
reproduce the long time scale folding processes of these molecules at a
level that is both faithful to the atomic driving forces and attainable with
modern commodity cluster computing. Alternatively, the past decade has seen
significant progress in using bioinformatics-based approaches to infer the
three dimensional native structures of proteins, drawing upon extensive
knowledge databases of known protein structures [1]. These methods work
remarkably well when a homologous protein can be found to provide a
structural template for a candidate sequence. However, in cases where
homology to database proteins is low, where the folding pathway is of
interest, or where conformational flexibility is substantial---as in many
emerging protein and peptide technologies---bioinformatics methods perform
poorly. There is therefore great interest in seeing purely physics-based
approaches succeed.
We discuss a purely physics-based, database-free folding method, relying on
proper thermal sampling (replica exchange molecular dynamics) and molecular
potential energy functions. In order to surmount the tremendous
computational demands of all-atom folding simulations, our approach
implements a conformational search strategy based on a putative protein
folding mechanism called zipping and assembly [2-4]. That is, we explicitly
seek out potential folding pathways inferred from short simulations, and
iteratively pursue all such routes by coaxing a polypeptide chain along
them. The method is called the Zipping and Assembly Method (ZAM) and it
works in two parts: (1) the full polypeptide chain is broken into small
fragments that are first simulated independently and then successively
re-assembled into larger segments with further sampling, and (2)
consistently stable structure in fragments is detected and locked into
place, in order to avoid re-sampling those degrees of freedom in subsequent
steps. ZAM pursues all potential folding routes it finds, which may be
mutually exclusive, and it ranks these by calculating free energies along
the way. Importantly, it gives full conformational ensembles and folding
pathways, features not captured by bioinformatics approaches.
We also discuss ways in which the structural ensembles and folding pathways
of ZAM can facilitate the rational design of peptide technologies. In
particular, we examine the coupling of ZAM-produced structures with
coarse-grained theories of transport and association, in order to model the
interactions of peptides with membranes (for insertion processes), proteins
(for binding processes), and other peptides (for aggregation processes).
Importantly, this approach is able to capture highly sequence-specific
effects due to the atomistic nature of the ZAM folding simulations,
providing a predictive tool for targeted sequence mutations.
1. J. Moult, \textit{A decade of CASP: progress, bottlenecks and prognosis in protein structure prediction,} Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. \textbf{15, }(2005).
2. K.M. Fiebig and K.A. Dill, \textit{Protein core assembly processes,} J. Chem. Phys. \textbf{98, }(1993).
3. S.B. Ozkan, G.H.A. Wu, J.D. Chodera, and K.A. Dill, \textit{Protein folding by zipping and assembly,} Proc. Natl. Acad.
Sci. U. S. A. \textbf{104, }(2007).
4. M.S. Shell, S.B. Ozkan, V.A. Voelz, G.H.A. Wu, and K. Dill, \textit{Can molecular physics predict the native structures of globular proteins?,} \textit{under review}\textbf{,
}(2007).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.U18.1