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From coarse-grain to all-atom: Toward multiscale analysis of protein landscapes

Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics, Vol. 68, No. 3. (2007), pp. 646-661.

X Abstract

Multiscale methods are becoming increasingly promising as a way to characterize the dynamics of large protein systems on biologically relevant time-scales. The underlying assumption in multiscale simulations is that it is possible to move reliably between different resolutions. We present a method that efficiently generates realistic all-atom protein structures starting from the C? atom positions, as obtained for instance from extensive coarse-grain simulations. The method, a reconstruction algorithm for coarse-grain structures (RACOGS), is validated by reconstructing ensembles of coarse-grain structures obtained during folding simulations of the proteins src-SH3 and S6. The results show that RACOGS consistently produces low energy, all-atom structures. A comparison of the free energy landscapes calculated using the coarse-grain structures versus the all-atom structures shows good correspondence and little distortion in the protein folding landscape. Proteins 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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This article has been bookmarked 6 times, initially on 2007-09-17.

2008-09-26 Group structural_bioinformatics
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2008-01-04 User mijam
2007-09-17 User aqeel
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