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Article
Docking Flexible Peptide to Flexible Protein by Molecular Dynamics Using Two Implicit-Solvent Models: An Evaluation in Protein Kinase and Phosphatase Systems
Journal of Physical Chemistry B (2009)
  • Zunnan Huang, University of Missouri–St. Louis
  • Chung F. Wong, University of Missouri–St. Louis
Abstract
Reliable prediction of protein-ligand docking pose requires proper account of induced fit effects. Treating both the ligand and the protein as flexible molecules is still challenging because many degrees of freedom are involved. Peptides are one type of ligand that are particularly difficult to study because of their extreme flexibility. In this study, we tested a molecular dynamics-based simulated-annealing cycling protocol in docking peptides to four protein kinases and two phosphatases using two implicit-solvent models: a distance-dependent dielectric model (epsilon(r) = 4r) and a version of the Generalized Born model termed GBMV. We found that the simpler epsilon(r) = 4r model identified docking pose better than the more expensive GBMV model. In addition, rescoring structures obtained from one implicit-solvent model with the other identified good docking poses for all six systems studied. Including protein energy in scoring also improved results.
Publication Date
October 29, 2009
DOI
10.1021/jp907375b
Citation Information
Zunnan Huang and Chung F. Wong. "Docking Flexible Peptide to Flexible Protein by Molecular Dynamics Using Two Implicit-Solvent Models: An Evaluation in Protein Kinase and Phosphatase Systems" Journal of Physical Chemistry B Vol. 113 Iss. 43 (2009) p. 14343 - 14354
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/chung-wong/16/