Protein-protein docking using evolutionary information

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Abstract

The structural modeling of protein complexes by docking simulations has been attracting increasing interest with the rise of proteomics and of the number of experimentally identified binary interactions. Structures of unbound partners, either modeled or experimentally determined, can be used as input to sample as extensively as possible all putative binding modes and single out the most plausible ones. At the scoring step, evolutionary information contained in the joint multiple sequence alignments of both partners can provide key insights to recognize correct interfaces. Here, we describe a computational protocol based on the InterEvDock web server to exploit coevolution constraints in protein-protein docking methods. We provide methodology guidelines to prepare the input protein structures and generate improved alignments. We also explain how to extract and use the information returned by the server through the analysis of two representative examples.

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Nadaradjane, A. A., Guerois, R., & Andreani, J. (2018). Protein-protein docking using evolutionary information. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1764, pp. 429–447). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7759-8_28

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