Abstract
Background
Many functionally important proteins in a cell form complexes with multiple chains. Therefore, computational prediction of multiple protein complexes is an important task in bioinformatics. In the development of multiple protein docking methods, it is important to establish a metric for evaluating prediction results in a reasonable and practical fashion. However, since there are only few works done in developing methods for multiple protein docking, there is no study that investigates how accurate structural models of multiple protein complexes should be to allow scientists to gain biological insights.
Methods
We generated a series of predicted models (decoys) of various accuracies by our multiple protein docking pipeline, Multi-LZerD, for three multi-chain complexes with 3, 4, and 6 chains. We analyzed the decoys in terms of the number of correctly predicted pair conformations in the decoys.
Results and conclusion
We found that pairs of chains with the correct mutual orientation exist even in the decoys with a large overall root mean square deviation (RMSD) to the native. Therefore, in addition to a global structure similarity measure, such as the global RMSD, the quality of models for multiple chain complexes can be better evaluated by using the local measurement, the number of chain pairs with correct mutual orientation. We termed the fraction of correctly predicted pairs (RMSD at the interface of less than 4.0Å) as fpair and propose to use it for evaluation of the accuracy of multiple protein docking.
Date of this Version
3-13-2012
DOI
10.1186/1471-2105-13-S2-S6
Recommended Citation
Esquivel-Rodriguez, Juan and Kihara, Daisuke, "Evaluation of Multiple Protein Docking Structures Using Correctly Predicted Pairwise Subunits." (2012). Department of Biological Sciences Faculty Publications. Paper 18.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-13-S2-S6
Comments
This is the publisher pdf of Juan Esquivel-Rodríguez, Daisuke Kihara. Evaluation of Multiple Protein Docking Structures Using Correctly Predicted Pairwise Subunits. BMC Bioinformatics 2012, 13(Suppl 2):S6 (13 March 2012) and is available at: 10.1186/1471-2105-13-S2-S6.