FiberDock: a web server for flexible induced-fit backbone refinement in molecular docking
Open Access
- 11 May 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 38 (Web Server) , W457-W461
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkq373
Abstract
Protein–protein docking algorithms aim to predict the structure of a complex given the atomic structures of the proteins that assemble it. The docking procedure usually consists of two main steps: docking candidate generation and their refinement. The refinement stage aims to improve the accuracy of the candidate solutions and to identify near-native solutions among them. During protein–protein interaction, both side chains and backbone change their conformation. Refinement methods should model these conformational changes in order to obtain a more accurate model of the complex. Handling protein backbone flexibility is a major challenge for docking methodologies, since backbone flexibility adds a huge number of degrees of freedom to the search space. FiberDock is the first docking refinement web server, which accounts for both backbone and side-chain flexibility. Given a set of up to 100 potential docking candidates, FiberDock models the backbone and side-chain movements that occur during the interaction, refines the structures and scores them according to an energy function. The FiberDock web server is free and available with no login requirement at http://bioinfo3d.cs.tau.ac.il/FiberDock/.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Principles of flexible protein–protein dockingProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2008
- The RosettaDock server for local protein-protein dockingNucleic Acids Research, 2008
- FireDock: a web server for fast interaction refinement in molecular dockingNucleic Acids Research, 2008
- Protein–Protein Docking with Backbone FlexibilityJournal of Molecular Biology, 2007
- NOMAD-Ref: visualization, deformation and refinement of macromolecular structures based on all-atom normal mode analysisNucleic Acids Research, 2006
- GRAMM-X public web server for protein-protein dockingNucleic Acids Research, 2006
- The Relationship between the Flexibility of Proteins and their Conformational States on Forming Protein–Protein Complexes with an Application to Protein–Protein DockingJournal of Molecular Biology, 2005
- Protein–Protein Interactions: Hot Spots and Structurally Conserved Residues often Locate in Complemented Pockets that Pre-organized in the Unbound States: Implications for DockingJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- UCSF Chimera—A visualization system for exploratory research and analysisJournal of Computational Chemistry, 2004
- The Protein Data BankNucleic Acids Research, 2000