Publications (3)10.66 Total impact
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Article: Inhibition of HIV-1 protease: the rigidity perspective.
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ABSTRACT: HIV-1 protease is a key drug target due to its role in the life cycle of the HIV-1 virus. Rigidity analysis using the software First is a computationally inexpensive method for inferring functional information from protein crystal structures. We evaluate the rigidity of 206 high-resolution (2 Å or better) X-ray crystal structures of HIV-1 protease and compare the effects of different inhibitors binding to the enzyme. Inhibitor binding has little effect on the overall rigidity of the protein homodimer, including the rigidity of the active site. The principal effect of inhibitor binding on rigidity is to constrain the flexibility of the β-hairpin flaps, which move to allow access to the active site of the enzyme. We show that commercially available antiviral drugs which target HIV-1 protease can be divided into two classes, those which significantly affect flap rigidity and those which do not. The non-peptidic inhibitor tipranavir is distinctive in its consistently strong effect on flap rigidity. jack.heal@warwick.ac.uk; r.roemer@warwick.ac.uk Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.Bioinformatics 02/2012; 28(3):350-7. · 5.47 Impact Factor -
Article: Rapid simulation of protein motion: merging flexibility, rigidity and normal mode analyses.
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ABSTRACT: Protein function frequently involves conformational changes with large amplitude on timescales which are difficult and computationally expensive to access using molecular dynamics. In this paper, we report on the combination of three computationally inexpensive simulation methods--normal mode analysis using the elastic network model, rigidity analysis using the pebble game algorithm, and geometric simulation of protein motion--to explore conformational change along normal mode eigenvectors. Using a combination of ElNemo and First/Froda software, large-amplitude motions in proteins with hundreds or thousands of residues can be rapidly explored within minutes using desktop computing resources. We apply the method to a representative set of six proteins covering a range of sizes and structural characteristics and show that the method identifies specific types of motion in each case and determines their amplitude limits.Physical Biology 02/2012; 9(1):016008. · 2.60 Impact Factor -
Article: Comparative analysis of rigidity across protein families.
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ABSTRACT: We present a comparative study in which 'pebble game' rigidity analysis is applied to multiple protein crystal structures, for each of six different protein families. We find that the main-chain rigidity of a protein structure at a given hydrogen bond energy cutoff is quite sensitive to small structural variations, and conclude that the hydrogen bond constraints in rigidity analysis should be chosen so as to form and test specific hypotheses about the rigidity of a particular protein. Our comparative approach highlights two different characteristic patterns ('sudden' or 'gradual') for protein rigidity loss as constraints are removed, in line with recent results on the rigidity transitions of glassy networks.Physical Biology 01/2009; 6(4):046005. · 2.60 Impact Factor
Top Journals
- Physical Biology (2)
- Bioinformatics (1)
Institutions
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2009
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The University of Warwick
- Centre for Scientific Computing
Warwick, ENG, United Kingdom
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