Development of a four-body statistical pseudo-potential to discriminate native from non-native protein conformations

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Abstract

Motivation: Most scoring functions used in protein fold recognition employ two-body (pseudo) potential energies. The use of higher-order terms may improve the performance of current algorithms. Methods: Proteins are represented by the side chain centroids of amino acids. Delaunay tessellation of this representation defines all sets of nearest neighbor quadruplets of amino acids. Four-body contact scoring function (log likelihoods of residue quadruplet compositions) is derived by the analysis of a diverse set of proteins with known structures. A test protein is characterized by the total score calculated as the sum of the individual log likelihoods of composing amino acid quadruplets. Results: The scoring function distinguishes native from partially unfolded or deliberately misfolded structures. It also discriminates between pre- and post-transition state and native structures in the folding simulations trajectory of Chymotrypsin Inhibitor 2 (CI2).

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Krishnamoorthy, B., & Tropsha, A. (2003). Development of a four-body statistical pseudo-potential to discriminate native from non-native protein conformations. Bioinformatics, 19(12), 1540–1548. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btg186

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