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28.03.2018 09:53

Protein analysis: Less is more

Dr. Peter Saueressig Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Heidelberger Institut für Theoretische Studien gGmbH

    CONAN to the rescue! The new software-package for molecular dynamic simulations compresses 3D data to contact maps and helps to analyze protein structures. The tool developed at HITS CONAN (CONtact ANalysis) has now been presented in the latest issue of „Biophysical Journal“.

    Proteins constantly move and change their conformation. Molecular dynamics typically answers the question of what the possible conformations of proteins are. Proteins, however, have a highly complicated and crowded structure, and understanding the changes in their behavior is a challenging task due to the high number of coordinates to monitor. Digesting the large amount of molecular data often involves creative 3D visualization, but even with considerable effort, important details can be missed. This led to a dual problem; not only was data visualization a challenge, but scientists also ran the risk of overlooking aspects of their own results. A novel tool called CONAN (CONtact ANalysis), developed from the “Molecular Biomechanics” at HITS, can alleviate these issues through compressing this 3D data into simpler 2D images capturing the key interactions, named contact maps.

    Contact maps measure inter-residue distances, thereby compressing 3D structures into 2D images. This often facilitates data interpretation and makes important changes easier to spot. These contact maps have usually only been used to study single protein structures as a single snapshot, but in fact they can easily be obtained for many structures, resulting in a contact map movie. This analysis somehow extends the saying "a figure is worth more than 1000 words" into the dynamic regime, since it creates a multitude of possible contact-map snapshots out of one simulation, identifying conformational subpopulations and transitions.

    Until now, contact maps-based analysis methods have been widely used only as understanding single structures, such as those in the protein data base (PDB). Even when the methods were generalized for dynamic simulations, the implementations were often various “ad hoc” analysis scripts, since there wasn’t a standardized tool. This meant that the measured quantities and definitions were inconsistent and results weren’t directly comparable. The new tool “CONAN” however is a standardized, easy-to-use package that allows several different types of analyses, for example including principal component analysis and cluster analysis. The tool developed by the HITS researchers Csaba Daday and Frauke Gräter of the Molecular Biomechanics group as well as former group member Davide Mercadante therefore fills a gap and offers a comprehensive, user-friendly program requiring no programming experience that can help scientists performing molecular dynamics calculations understand and present their data. Hopefully, this will lead to a more widespread use of these measures, and a more uniform set of definitions. The tool is open access and free of use. The team at HITS also constantly optimizes the software and is open to feedback from the community.

    CONAN is freely available at: https://github.com/HITS-MBM/conan/tree/master/docs
    Examples and illustrations can be found on our blog: https://contactmaps.blogspot.de/ and our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEjgMtcojYuucVLI2PPv7oA

    Article in "Biophysical Journal":
    CONAN: A Tool to Decode Dynamical Information from Molecular Interaction Maps. Davide Mercadante, Frauke Gräter, Csaba Daday. Biophysical Journal,
    Volume 114, Issue 6, p1267–1273, 27 March 2018. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2018.01.033
    http://www.cell.com/biophysj/fulltext/S0006-3495(18)30193-0

    Scientific Contact:

    Prof. Dr. Frauke Gräter
    Group Leader „Molecular Biomechanics“
    HITS - Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies
    E-mail: frauke.graeter@h-its.org

    Dr. Csaba Daday
    Group Member „Molecular Biomechanics“
    HITS - Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies
    E-mail: Csaba.Daday@h-its.org

    About HITS

    The Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies (HITS) was established in 2010 by the physicist and SAP co-founder Klaus Tschira (1940-2015) and the Klaus Tschira Foundation as a private, non-profit research institute. HITS conducts basic research in the natural sciences, mathematics and computer science, with a focus on the processing, structuring, and analyzing of large amounts of complex data and the development of computational methods and software. The research fields range from molecular biology to astrophysics. The shareholders of HITS are the HITS Stiftung, which is a subsidiary of the Klaus Tschira Foundation, Heidelberg University and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). HITS also cooperates with other universities and research institutes and with industrial partners. The base funding of HITS is provided by the HITS Stiftung with funds received from the Klaus Tschira Foundation. The primary external funding agencies are the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), the German Research Foundation (DFG), and the European Union.


    Weitere Informationen:

    https://www.h-its.org/scientific-news/protein-analysis-less-is-more/ HITS Press release
    http://www.cell.com/biophysj/fulltext/S0006-3495(18)30193-0 Article in "Biophysical JOurnal"
    example video


    Bilder

    CONAN transforms the 3D structure of the protein ubiquitin into a 2D contact map. Left: Structure of ubiquitin, colored by residue index. Right: Inter-residue distance map computed by CONAN.
    CONAN transforms the 3D structure of the protein ubiquitin into a 2D contact map. Left: Structure of ...
    Image: Csaba Daday, HITS
    None


    Merkmale dieser Pressemitteilung:
    Journalisten, Studierende, Wissenschaftler
    Biologie, Informationstechnik, Mathematik
    überregional
    Forschungsergebnisse
    Englisch


     

    CONAN transforms the 3D structure of the protein ubiquitin into a 2D contact map. Left: Structure of ubiquitin, colored by residue index. Right: Inter-residue distance map computed by CONAN.


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