Automated electron‐density sampling reveals widespread conformational polymorphism in proteins
Open Access
- 23 June 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Protein Science
- Vol. 19 (7), 1420-1431
- https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.423
Abstract
Although proteins populate large structural ensembles, X-ray diffraction data are traditionally interpreted using a single model. To search for evidence of alternate conformers, we developed a program, Ringer, which systematically samples electron density around the dihedral angles of protein side chains. In a diverse set of 402 structures, Ringer identified weak, nonrandom electron-density features that suggest of the presence of hidden, lowly populated conformations for >18% of uniquely modeled residues. Although these peaks occur at electron-density levels traditionally regarded as noise, statistically significant (P < 10−5) enrichment of peaks at successive rotameric χ angles validates the assignment of these features as unmodeled conformations. Weak electron density corresponding to alternate rotamers also was detected in an accurate electron density map free of model bias. Ringer analysis of the high-resolution structures of free and peptide-bound calmodulin identified shifts in ensembles and connected the alternate conformations to ligand recognition. These results show that the signal in high-resolution electron density maps extends below the traditional 1 σ cutoff, and crystalline proteins are more polymorphic than current crystallographic models. Ringer provides an objective, systematic method to identify previously undiscovered alternate conformations that can mediate protein folding and function.Keywords
Funding Information
- NIH (F32 GM069165, R01 GM48598)
- NSF
- Canadian NSERC
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hidden alternative structures of proline isomerase essential for catalysisNature, 2009
- Modeling discrete heterogeneity in X-ray diffraction data by fitting multi-conformersActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 2009
- Internal dynamics control activation and activity of the autoinhibited Vav DH domainNature Structural & Molecular Biology, 2008
- Ensemble Refinement of Protein Crystal Structures: Validation and ApplicationStructure, 2007
- Interpretation of ensembles created by multiple iterative rebuilding of macromolecular modelsActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 2007
- Relation between native ensembles and experimental structures of proteinsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Is one solution good enough?Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 2006
- Coot: model-building tools for molecular graphicsActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 2004
- UCSF Chimera—A visualization system for exploratory research and analysisJournal of Computational Chemistry, 2004
- The CCP4 suite: programs for protein crystallographyActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 1994