Practically Useful: What the RosettaProtein Modeling Suite Can Do for You
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 17 March 2010
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 49 (14) , 2987-2998
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi902153g
Abstract
The objective of this review is to enable researchers to use the software package Rosetta for biochemical and biomedicinal studies. We provide a brief review of the six most frequent research problems tackled with Rosetta. For each of these six tasks, we provide a tutorial that illustrates a basic Rosetta protocol. The Rosetta method was originally developed for de novo protein structure prediction and is regularly one of the best performers in the community-wide biennial Critical Assessment of Structure Prediction. Predictions for protein domains with fewer than 125 amino acids regularly have a backbone root-mean-square deviation of better than 5.0 Å. More impressively, there are several cases in which Rosetta has been used to predict structures with atomic level accuracy better than 2.5 Å. In addition to de novo structure prediction, Rosetta also has methods for molecular docking, homology modeling, determining protein structures from sparse experimental NMR or EPR data, and protein design. Rosetta has been used to accurately design a novel protein structure, predict the structure of protein−protein complexes, design altered specificity protein−protein and protein−DNA interactions, and stabilize proteins and protein complexes. Most recently, Rosetta has been used to solve the X-ray crystallographic phase problem.Keywords
This publication has 86 references indexed in Scilit:
- Blind docking of pharmaceutically relevant compounds using RosettaLigandProtein Science, 2009
- Refinement of Protein Structures into Low-Resolution Density Maps Using RosettaPublished by Elsevier ,2009
- Improving NMR protein structure quality by Rosetta refinement: A molecular replacement studyProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2009
- Structure prediction for CASP8 with all‐atom refinement using RosettaProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2009
- RosettaHoles: Rapid assessment of protein core packing for structure prediction, refinement, design, and validationProtein Science, 2008
- De novo protein structure generation from incomplete chemical shift assignmentsJournal of Biomolecular NMR, 2008
- RosettaLigand Docking with Full Ligand and Receptor FlexibilityJournal of Molecular Biology, 2008
- Structural determinants of species‐selective substrate recognition in human and Drosophila serotonin transporters revealed through computational docking studiesProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2008
- Rab and Arl GTPase Family Members Cooperate in the Localization of the Golgin GCC185Cell, 2008
- ROSETTALIGAND: Protein–small molecule docking with full side‐chain flexibilityProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2006