TY - GEN
T1 - Ranking docked models of protein-protein complexes using predicted partner-specific protein-protein interfaces
T2 - 2011 ACM Conference on Bioinformatics, Computational Biology and Biomedicine, ACM-BCB 2011
AU - Xue, Li C.
AU - Jordan, Rafael A.
AU - El-Manzalawy, Yasser
AU - Dobbs, Drena
AU - Honavar, Vasant
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Computational protein-protein docking is a valuable tool for determining the conformation of complexes formed by interacting proteins. Selecting near-native conformations from the large number of possible models generated by docking software presents a significant challenge in practice. We introduce a novel method for ranking docked conformations based on the degree of overlap between the interface residues of a docked conformation formed by a pair of proteins with the set of predicted interface residues between them. Our approach relies on a method, called PS-HomPPI, for reliably predicting proteinprotein interface residues by taking into account information derived from both interacting proteins. PS-HomPPI infers the residues of a query protein that are likely to interact with a partner protein based on known interface residues of the homo-interologs of the query-partner protein pair, i.e., pairs of interacting proteins that are homologous to the query protein and partner protein. Our results on Docking Benchmark 3.0 show that the quality of the ranking of docked conformations using our method is consistently superior to that produced using ClusPro cluster-size-based and energy-based criteria for 61 out of the 64 docking complexes for which PS-HomPPI produces interface predictions. An implementation of our method for ranking docked models is freely available at: http://einstein.cs.iastate.edu/DockRank/.
AB - Computational protein-protein docking is a valuable tool for determining the conformation of complexes formed by interacting proteins. Selecting near-native conformations from the large number of possible models generated by docking software presents a significant challenge in practice. We introduce a novel method for ranking docked conformations based on the degree of overlap between the interface residues of a docked conformation formed by a pair of proteins with the set of predicted interface residues between them. Our approach relies on a method, called PS-HomPPI, for reliably predicting proteinprotein interface residues by taking into account information derived from both interacting proteins. PS-HomPPI infers the residues of a query protein that are likely to interact with a partner protein based on known interface residues of the homo-interologs of the query-partner protein pair, i.e., pairs of interacting proteins that are homologous to the query protein and partner protein. Our results on Docking Benchmark 3.0 show that the quality of the ranking of docked conformations using our method is consistently superior to that produced using ClusPro cluster-size-based and energy-based criteria for 61 out of the 64 docking complexes for which PS-HomPPI produces interface predictions. An implementation of our method for ranking docked models is freely available at: http://einstein.cs.iastate.edu/DockRank/.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84858952450&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84858952450&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/2147805.2147866
DO - 10.1145/2147805.2147866
M3 - Conference contribution
C2 - 25905110
AN - SCOPUS:84858952450
SN - 9781450307963
T3 - 2011 ACM Conference on Bioinformatics, Computational Biology and Biomedicine, BCB 2011
SP - 441
EP - 445
BT - 2011 ACM Conference on Bioinformatics, Computational Biology and Biomedicine, BCB 2011
Y2 - 1 August 2011 through 3 August 2011
ER -