SURVEY AND SUMMARY: The morph server: a standardized system for analyzing and visualizing macromolecular motions in a database framework
Open Access
- 15 April 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 28 (8), 1665-1675
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/28.8.1665
Abstract
The number of solved structures of macromolecules that have the same fold and thus exhibit some degree of conformational variability is rapidly increasing. It is consequently advantageous to develop a standardized terminology for describing this variability and automated systems for processing protein structures in different conformations. We have developed such a system as a ‘front-end’ server to our database of macromolecular motions. Our system attempts to describe a protein motion as a rigid-body rotation of a small ‘core’ relative to a larger one, using a set of hinges. The motion is placed in a standardized coordinate system so that all statistics between any two motions are directly comparable. We find that while this model can accommodate most protein motions, it cannot accommodate all; the degree to which a motion can be accommodated provides an aid in classifying it. Furthermore, we perform an adiabatic mapping (a restrained interpolation) between every two conformations. This gives some indication of the extent of the energetic barriers that need to be surmounted in the motion, and as a by-product results in a ‘morph movie’. We make these movies available over the Web to aid in visualization. Many instances of conformational variability occur between proteins with somewhat different sequences. We can accommodate these differences in a rough fashion, generating an ‘evolutionary morph’. Users have already submitted hundreds of examples of protein motions to our server, producing a comprehensive set of statistics. So far the statistics show that the median submitted motion has a rotation of ~10° and a maximum Cα displacement of 17 Å. Almost all involve at least one large torsion angle change of >140°. The server is accessible at http://bioinfo.mbb.yale.edu/MolMovDBKeywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assessing annotation transfer for genomics: quantifying the relations between protein sequence, structure and function through traditional and probabilistic scoresJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- Crystal Structures of Escherichia coli Glycerol Kinase Variant S58→W in Complex with Nonhydrolyzable ATP Analogues Reveal a Putative Active Conformation of the Enzyme as a Result of Domain Motion,Biochemistry, 1999
- The structure of a trimeric archaeal adenylate kinaseJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Structure of a Protein Photocycle Intermediate by Millisecond Time-Resolved CrystallographyScience, 1997
- Site-directed mutants designed to test back-door hypotheses of acetylcholinesterase functionFEBS Letters, 1996
- Average Core Structures and Variability Measures for Protein Families: Application to the ImmunoglobulinsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1995
- Open "Back Door" in a Molecular Dynamics Simulation of AcetylcholinesteraseScience, 1994
- Analysis of protein loop closure: Two types of hinges produce one motion in lactate dehydrogenaseJournal of Molecular Biology, 1991
- Flexible protein sequence patternsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- Structure of a triclinic ternary complex of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase at 2.9 Å resolutionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1981