Homodimer Structure Calculation Using CYANA: Difference between revisions

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GLU 306</pre>  
GLU 306</pre>  
<br> The CYANA residue library provides the following linker pseudo-residues: <tt>PL</tt>, <tt>LP</tt>, <tt>LL</tt>, <tt>LL2</tt> and <tt>LL5</tt>. The first two are special transition "residues", which are required to start and terminate the linker, respectively. The last three are intermediate linker "residues" of differing sizes, with "bonds" of standard length, double length and quintuple length. The "atoms" of these linker "residues" have zero mass and zero Van-der-Vaals radii, thus the linker can freely pass through the structure during simulated annealing. The "bonds" of the linker cannot be stretched, however, and it is necessary to use a linker of sufficient length to avoid putting unnatural strain on the subunits.  
The CYANA residue library provides the following linker pseudo-residues: <tt>PL</tt>, <tt>LP</tt>, <tt>LL</tt>, <tt>LL2</tt> and <tt>LL5</tt>. The first two are special transition "residues", which are required to start and terminate the linker, respectively. The last three are intermediate linker "residues" of differing sizes, with "bonds" of standard length, double length and quintuple length. The "atoms" of these linker "residues" have zero mass and zero Van-der-Vaals radii, thus the linker can freely pass through the structure during simulated annealing. The "bonds" of the linker cannot be stretched, however, and it is necessary to use a linker of sufficient length to avoid putting unnatural strain on the subunits.  


It is convenient to have the residue numbers of the second subunit shifted by 100 or 200 compared to the first subunit. The first subunit in this example protein has residue numbers 11 to 106, while the second subunit has residue numbers from 211 to 306. It is not necessary to insert a linker exactly 94 residues long - hops in the residue numbers, such as between <tt>LP 130</tt> and <tt>MET 211</tt>, are accepted.
It is convenient to have the residue numbers of the second subunit shifted by 100 or 200 compared to the first subunit. The first subunit in this example protein has residue numbers 11 to 106, while the second subunit has residue numbers from 211 to 306. It is not necessary to insert a linker exactly 94 residues long - hops in the residue numbers, such as between <tt>LP 130</tt> and <tt>MET 211</tt>, are accepted.  
 
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==== '''Duplicated Atom List'''  ====
==== '''Duplicated Atom List'''  ====

Revision as of 23:47, 31 October 2009

Symmetric Homodimer Structure Calculation by CYANA

CYANA2.1 can perform structure calculation with automated NOE assignment for symmetric homodimers. The algorithm is slightly different from what is used to calculate monomers or asymmetric oligomers. Additional restraints are introduced to keep the molecule and the force field symmetric.

Input Data

Chemical shift assignment is performed for a single protein chain. Thus, the input for a symmetric homodimer calculation must include:

  • duplicated sequence file
  • duplicated atom list
  • duplicated external constraint files, if any

Duplicated Sequence File

The protein sequence must be repeated twice with a linker between protein chains as in this example:

MET 11
ALA 12
GLU 13
VAL 14
GLU 15
...
GLU 106
PL   107
LL2  108
...
LL2  128
LL2  129
LP   130
MET  211
ALA  212
GLU 213
VAL 214
GLU 215
...
GLU 306

The CYANA residue library provides the following linker pseudo-residues: PL, LP, LL, LL2 and LL5. The first two are special transition "residues", which are required to start and terminate the linker, respectively. The last three are intermediate linker "residues" of differing sizes, with "bonds" of standard length, double length and quintuple length. The "atoms" of these linker "residues" have zero mass and zero Van-der-Vaals radii, thus the linker can freely pass through the structure during simulated annealing. The "bonds" of the linker cannot be stretched, however, and it is necessary to use a linker of sufficient length to avoid putting unnatural strain on the subunits.

It is convenient to have the residue numbers of the second subunit shifted by 100 or 200 compared to the first subunit. The first subunit in this example protein has residue numbers 11 to 106, while the second subunit has residue numbers from 211 to 306. It is not necessary to insert a linker exactly 94 residues long - hops in the residue numbers, such as between LP 130 and MET 211, are accepted.

 

Duplicated Atom List

Chemical shifts in the atom list should be duplicated to include assignments for the second chain 155 119.362 0.000 N 11 156 8.323 0.004 HN 11 157 56.722 0.000 CA 11 158 4.318 0.005 HA 11 159 31.426 0.000 CB 11 160 2.010 0.000 HB2 11 161 2.137 0.000 HB3 11 ... 1818 119.362 0.000 N 211 1819 8.323 0.004 HN 211 1820 56.722 0.000 CA 211 1821 4.318 0.005 HA 211 1822 31.426 0.000 CB 211 1823 2.010 0.000 HB2 211 1824 2.137 0.000 HB3 211

Duplicated External Constraints

All external constraints, such as intramolecular UPLs, ACOs and hydrogen bond constraints, must be duplicated to include both chains, otherwise the symmetry of the model will be broken. Intermolecular UPLs should also be given as symmetric pairs.

Modified init.cya

It is necessary to add a molecules define statement to the init.cya file. The statement tells CYANA to perform the symmetric homodimer calculation, and the residue ranges are used to maintain symmetry.

name:=hr2106-cyana cyanalib read seq $name.seq rmsdrange:=12..104,212..304 molecules define 11..106 211..306

Automatic Calculation

Run the same CALC.cya macro as usual.

Though in principle CYANA is able to perform calculation of homodimer structures without external constraints, the proper convergence has not been observed yet, at least in Szyperski's lab. The typical result is two separate protein chains, instead of a dimer structure. The poor convergence is not that surprising given that symmetric homodimer calculation and NOE assignment is a massively degenerate problem, compared to the monomer case.

The standard approach of using external intraresidue- and short-range UPL together with ACOs from TALOS does not improve convergence, since these constraints are purely intramolecular. To "nudge" the structure calculation in the proper direction external intermolecular UPLs should be supplied. These are obtained from an X-filtered NOESY experiment on a 50:50 labeled/unlabeled protein mixture.

It is not necessary to generate constraints for every cross-peak in the X-filtered NOESY spectrum. Instead, one should focus on a few strong cross-peaks, which can be manually assigned with absolute certainty. For example, the structure calculation of StR106 converged to the correct dimer geometry after adding a single intermolecular UPL constraint between an aromatic ring proton and a methyl group.

Manual Calculation

  • Manual run

Similar to the automatic run, modify the seq file, prot list, init.cya, and run the CYANA manual CALC macro as usual.



-- Main.GaohuaLiu - 09 Nov 2007