MIPT in Moscow Develops New Method of Calculating Protein Interaction

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menu_imageBiologists and mathematicians from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT) have accelerated the rate at which a computer can predict the structure of protein complexes in a cell.

The new method enables us to model the interaction of proteins at the genome level. This will give us a better understanding of how our cells function and may enable drug development for diseases caused by ‘incorrect’ protein interactions,” commented Dima Kozakov, a professor at Stony Brook and adjunct professor at MIPT.

The research was carried out by MIPT in collaboration with Stony Brook University and other scientific research centers. The study has been published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA.

The research will help scientists to better understand the function of cells leading to more efficient drug development in the future.

Current research focuses on looking at all of the possible alternative orientations of two large molecules in relation to one another. To find a combination that can exist scientists need to understand how they will look when ‘docked.’ This is known as the rigid docking method, where the structure of the elements is given and they need to be assembled in the best configuration. In scientific terms, this task is called protein-protein docking.

In the new algorithm, proteins are denoted in a radial-spherical coordinate system, which itself is as close as possible to the shape of the protein. This allows the proteins to be split into “functional units” to solve the problem in a simpler way.

While this task may seem straightforward assembling the structure of proteins is a complex task. According to the researchers, the computational complexity of such an operation is comparable to assembling all the possible pairs of 10,000 blocks of Lego.

This new research presents proteins as a combination of “quantum surfaces” – certain blocks described by the mathematical tool of quantum mechanics. Using this approach, it is possible to simultaneously calculate the interaction between multiple pairs of protein clusters, rather than examining each pair independently. The new method is up to 100 times faster than the best methods used previously, with comparable accuracy. According to the scientists, the program takes 15 minutes to run on a personal computer and is a good alternative to experimental methods of determining protein interactions.

The new algorithm will soon become part of ClusPro – an automated system for calculating protein-protein interactions. This resource, which was developed earlier by the authors of the paper, now has more than 15,000 users worldwide. In the latest CAPRI round (Critical Assessment of Prediction of Interactions – a community-wide experiment to determine the structure of proteins), the ClusPro server was recognized as the best automated system for calculating protein-protein interactions.

In normal cells, there are thousands of different protein interactions. Explaining these interactions will help us to describe important processes: how the body works as a whole, and methods of treating certain diseases (such as cancer),” says Dima Kozakov commenting on the study.

Andrey Kazennov, a postgraduate student at MIPT, and Dmitry Padhorny, a postgraduate student at Stony Brook with a Master’s degree from MIPT, also contributed to the paper.

The study was supported by a Grant (14.A18.21.1973) from the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation.

This story appears here as part of a cross-publishing agreement with Scientific Computing World.

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