Local Motion And Local Accuracy In Protein Backbone

dc.contributor.advisor

Richardson, David C

dc.contributor.advisor

Richardson, Jane S

dc.contributor.author

Davis, Ian Wheeler

dc.date.accessioned

2006-10-19T15:43:30Z

dc.date.available

2006-10-19T15:43:30Z

dc.date.issued

2006-09

dc.department

Biochemistry

dc.description.abstract

Proteins are chemically simple molecules, being unbranched polymers of uncomplicated organic compounds. Nonetheless, they fold up into a dazzling variety of complex and beautiful configurations with a dizzying array of structural, regulatory, and catalytic functions. Despite great progress, we still have very limited ability to predict the folded conformation of an amino acid sequence, and limited understanding of its dynamics and motions. Thus, this work presents a quartet of interrelated studies that address some aspects of the detailed local conformations and motions of protein backbone. First, I used a density-dependent smoothing algorithm and a high-quality, B-filtered data set to construct highly accurate conformational distributions for protein backbone (Ramachandran plots) and sidechains (rotamers). These distributions are the most accurate and restrictive produced to date, with improved discrimination between rare-but-real conformations and artifactual ones. Second, I analyzed hundreds of alternate conformations in atomic resolution crystal structures, and discovered that dramatic conformational change in a protein sidechain is often coupled to a subtle but very common mode of conformational change in its backbone -- the backrub motion. Examination of other biophysical data further supports the ubiquity of this motion. Third, I applied a model of backrub motion to protein design calculations. Although experimental characterization of the designs showed them to be unstable and/or inactive, the computational results proved to be very sensitive to changes in the backbone. Finally, I describe how MolProbity uses my conformational distributions together with all-atom contacts and other tools to validate protein structures, and how those quality metrics can be combined visually or analytically to provide "multi-criterion" validation summaries.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/5

dc.language.iso

en_US

dc.rights.uri

http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

dc.subject

Biophysics, General

dc.subject

Structural biology

dc.subject

Bioinformatics

dc.subject

Backrub

dc.subject

Protein backbone

dc.subject

Validation

dc.title

Local Motion And Local Accuracy In Protein Backbone

dc.type

Dissertation

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
D_IanWheelerDavis_a_082006.pdf
Size:
17.55 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
dissertation

Collections