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Description I just wanted to repost the notes on what goes into a "typical protein:ligand setup pipeline" from our meeting at MolSSI on 8 Oct 2016.
Contributors
John Chodera
Julien Michel
Peter Kasson
Oliver Beckstein
Before starting, Julien frequently does some manual inspection in a GUI:
missing loops
incomplete residues
cofactors: keep or discard? where to get parameters?
ions: keep or substitute?
crystal waters: keep or throw away?
crystal contacts, domain swapping
Read PDB paper to ensure that this is the protein structure that he wants to use
Note that assay conditions may differ from crystallographic conditions
What is our "typical" biomolecular preparation pipeline?
Decide which structure you want to use
Decide which chain to use if multiple copies
Reverting mutations or simulate a different construct
Disulfide if not in a reducing environment
Address PTMs
Julien typically uses the Maestro Protein Prep Wizard to:
add missing loops (up to a certain length)
add N/C-termini? Most people omit these
assign protonation states for desired pH
keep crystal waters; add hydrogens
interactively check histidine
Structural metal ions (e.g. Zn2+, Ca2+):
decide whether to retain
substitute with multisite models (alternatives: covalently bonded (harmonically restrained); single-site LJ)
Ligands and cofactors:
pick protonation state / tautomer
find or create parameters
covalently bound cofactors?
Consult Uppsala EDS to verify that ligand density justifies binding mode
model in rest of ligand or replace the ligand with another one (CCSD? swap from other PDB file? OpenEye)
Protonation states?
(PROPKA? 3.1 can do ligands; MCCE2?)
Counterions and solvent
can do in either order
how big should box be? what shape? what buffer should be used? (Peter Kasson uses 20A buffer; Julien uses 12A; Oliver uses 15A)
for membrane proteins, at least 3-4 layers of lipids sideways; z-axis is very tricky
ionic strength
Challenges not yet addressed:
Membrane proteins
Proteins at surfaces/interfaces
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I just wanted to repost the notes on what goes into a "typical protein:ligand setup pipeline" from our meeting at MolSSI on 8 Oct 2016.
Contributors
Before starting, Julien frequently does some manual inspection in a GUI:
What is our "typical" biomolecular preparation pipeline?
Counterions and solvent
Challenges not yet addressed: