Molecular dynamics-based refinement and validation for sub-5 Å cryo-electron microscopy maps.

2016 
To understand the roles that proteins and other large molecules play inside cells, it is important to determine their structures. One of the techniques that researchers can use to do this is called cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), which rapidly freezes molecules to fix them in position before imaging them in fine detail. The cryo-EM images are like maps that show the approximate position of atoms. These images must then be processed in order to build a three-dimensional model of the protein that shows how its atoms are arranged relative to each other. One computational approach called Molecular Dynamics Flexible Fitting (MDFF) works by flexibly fitting possible atomic structures into cryo-EM maps. Although this approach works well with relatively undetailed (or ‘low resolution’) cryo-EM images, it struggles to handle the high-resolution cryo-EM maps now being generated. Singharoy, Teo, McGreevy et al. have now developed two MDFF methods – called cascade MDFF and resolution exchange MDFF – that help to resolve atomic models of biological molecules from cryo-EM images. Each method can refine poorly guessed models into ones that are consistent with the high-resolution experimental images. The refinement is achieved by interpreting a range of images that starts with a ‘fuzzy’ image. The contrast of the image is then progressively improved until an image is produced that has a resolution that is good enough to almost distinguish individual atoms. The method works because each cryo-EM image shows not just one, but a collection of atomic structures that the molecule can take on, with the fuzzier parts of the image representing the more flexible parts of the molecule. By taking into account this flexibility, the large-scale features of the protein structure can be determined first from the fuzzier images, and increasing the contrast of the images allows smaller-scale refinements to be made to the structure. The MDFF tools have been designed to be easy to use and are available to researchers at low cost through cloud computing platforms. They can now be used to unravel the structure of many different proteins and protein complexes including those involved in photosynthesis, respiration and protein synthesis.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    90
    References
    97
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []