A.L.-F. and G.L.B. contributed equally to this work.
Maintaining solvent accessible surface area under rotamer substitution for protein design
Article first published online: 6 FEB 2007
DOI: 10.1002/jcc.20626
Copyright © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Additional Information
How to Cite
Leaver-Fay, A., Butterfoss, G. L., Snoeyink, J. and Kuhlman, B. (2007), Maintaining solvent accessible surface area under rotamer substitution for protein design. Journal of Computational Chemistry, 28: 1336–1341. doi: 10.1002/jcc.20626
Publication History
- Issue published online: 10 APR 2007
- Article first published online: 6 FEB 2007
- Manuscript Accepted: 8 NOV 2006
- Manuscript Received: 20 JUL 2006
Funded by
- DARPA. Grant Number: HR0011-05-10044
- Abstract
- Article
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- computational protein design;
- solvent accessible;
- surface area;
- protein stability
Abstract
Although quantities derived from solvent accessible surface areas (SASA) are useful in many applications in protein design and structural biology, the computational cost of accurate SASA calculation makes SASA-based scores difficult to integrate into commonly used protein design methodologies. We demonstrate a method for maintaining accurate SASA during a Monte Carlo search of sequence and rotamer space for a fixed protein backbone. We extend the fast Le Grand and Merz algorithm (Le Grand and Merz, J Comput Chem, 14, 349), which discretizes the solvent accessible surface for each atom by placing dots on a sphere and combines Boolean masks to determine which dots are exposed. By replacing semigroup operations with group operations (from Boolean logic to counting dot coverage) we support SASA updates. Our algorithm takes time proportional to the number of atoms affected by rotamer substitution, rather than the number of atoms in the protein. For design simulations with a one hundred residue protein our approach is ∼145 times faster than performing a Le Grand and Merz SASA calculation from scratch following each rotamer substitution. To demonstrate practical effectiveness, we optimize a SASA-based measure of protein packing in the complete redesign of a large set of proteins and protein–protein interfaces. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem 2007

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