The prediction of protein structure from sequence remains a major unsolved problem in biology. The most successful protein structure prediction methods make use of a divide-and-conquer strategy to attack the problem: a conformational sampling method generates plausible candidate structures, which are subsequently accepted or rejected using an energy function. Conceptually, this often corresponds to separating local structural bias from the long-range interactions that stabilize the compact, native state. However, sampling protein conformations that are compatible with the local structural bias encoded in a given protein sequence is a long-standing open problem, especially in continuous space. We describe an elegant and mathematically rigorous method to do this, and show that it readily generates native-like protein conformations simply by enforcing compactness. Our results have far-reaching implications for protein structure prediction, determination, simulation, and design. © 2006 Hamelryck et al.
CITATION STYLE
Hamelryck, T., Kent, J. T., & Krogh, A. (2006). Sampling realistic protein conformations using local structural bias. PLoS Computational Biology, 2(9), 1121–1133. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0020131
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