Blind prediction of interfacial water positions in CAPRI
Authors list
Marc F Lensink Iain H Moal Paul Bates Panagiotis L Kastritis Adrien SJ Melquiond Ezgi Karaca Christophe Schmitz Marc van Dijk Alexandre MJJ Bonvin Miriam Eisenstein Brian Jiménez-García Solène Grosdidier Albert Solernou Laura Pérez-Cano Chiara Pallara Juan Fernández-Recio Jianqing Xu Pravin Muthu Krishna Praneeth Kilambi Jeffrey J Gray Sergei Grudinin Georgy Derevyanko Julie C Mitchell John Wieting Eiji Kanamori Yuko Tsuchiya Yoichi Murakami Joy Sarmiento Daron M Standley Matsuyuki Shirota Kengo Kinoshita Haruki Nakamura Matthieu Chavent David W Ritchie Hahnbeom Park Junsu Ko Hasup Lee Chaok Seok Yang Shen Dima Kozakov Sandor Vajda Petras J Kundrotas Ilya A Vakser Brian G Pierce Howook Hwang Thom Vreven Zhiping Weng Idit Buch Efrat Farkash Haim J Wolfson Martin Zacharias Sanbo Qin Huan-Xiang Zhou Shen-You Huang Xiaoqin Zou Justyna A Wojdyla Colin Kleanthous Shoshana J Wodak Toggle all authors (58)
Abstract
We report the first assessment of blind predictions of water positions at protein-protein interfaces, performed as part of the critical assessment of predicted interactions (CAPRI) community-wide experiment. Groups submitting docking predictions for the complex of the DNase domain of colicin E2 and Im2 immunity protein (CAPRI Target 47), were invited to predict the positions of interfacial water molecules using the method of their choice. The predictions-20 groups submitted a total of 195 models-were assessed by measuring the recall fraction of water-mediated protein contacts. Of the 176 high- or medium-quality docking models-a very good docking performance per se-only 44% had a recall fraction above 0.3, and a mere 6% above 0.5. The actual water positions were in general predicted to an accuracy level no better than 1.5 Å, and even in good models about half of the contacts represented false positives. This notwithstanding, three hotspot interface water positions were quite well predicted, and so was one of the water positions that is believed to stabilize the loop that confers specificity in these complexes. Overall the best interface water predictions was achieved by groups that also produced high-quality docking models, indicating that accurate modelling of the protein portion is a determinant factor. The use of established molecular mechanics force fields, coupled to sampling and optimization procedures also seemed to confer an advantage. Insights gained from this analysis should help improve the prediction of protein-water interactions and their role in stabilizing protein complexes.
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Publisher website (DOI) 10.1002/prot.24439
Europe PubMed Central 24155158
Pubmed 24155158
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