AI Article Synopsis

  • Current computer simulations allow for detailed modeling of small-angle scattering (SAS) data at the atomic level, incorporating various structural constraints from different scientific methods like crystallography and NMR.
  • The CCP-SAS collaboration is developing user-friendly, open-source software to facilitate atomistic and coarse-grained molecular modeling of scattering data, integrating experimental results with advanced simulation techniques.
  • Case studies demonstrate the software's applications in understanding protein flexibility, antibody hinge conformation, protein-mRNA complexes, and synthetic polymers.

Article Abstract

The capabilities of current computer simulations provide a unique opportunity to model small-angle scattering (SAS) data at the atomistic level, and to include other structural constraints ranging from molecular and atomistic energetics to crystallography, electron microscopy and NMR. This extends the capabilities of solution scattering and provides deeper insights into the physics and chemistry of the systems studied. Realizing this potential, however, requires integrating the experimental data with a new generation of modelling software. To achieve this, the CCP-SAS collaboration (http://www.ccpsas.org/) is developing open-source, high-throughput and user-friendly software for the atomistic and coarse-grained molecular modelling of scattering data. Robust state-of-the-art molecular simulation engines and molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo force fields provide constraints to the solution structure inferred from the small-angle scattering data, which incorporates the known physical chemistry of the system. The implementation of this software suite involves a tiered approach in which provides the deployment infrastructure for running applications on both standard and high-performance computing hardware, and provides a workflow framework into which modules can be plugged to prepare structures, carry out simulations, calculate theoretical scattering data and compare results with experimental data. produces the accessible web-based front end termed , and and also make community SAS codes available. Applications are illustrated by case studies: (i) inter-domain flexibility in two- to six-domain proteins as exemplified by HIV-1 Gag, MASP and ubiquitin; (ii) the hinge conformation in human IgG2 and IgA1 antibodies; (iii) the complex formed between a hexameric protein Hfq and mRNA; and (iv) synthetic 'bottlebrush' polymers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5139988PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S160057671601517XDOI Listing

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