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Modeling Peptide-Protein Interactions

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Cover of 'Modeling Peptide-Protein Interactions'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
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    Chapter 1 The Usage of ACCLUSTER for Peptide Binding Site Prediction
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    Chapter 2 Detection of Peptide-Binding Sites on Protein Surfaces Using the Peptimap Server
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    Chapter 3 Peptide Suboptimal Conformation Sampling for the Prediction of Protein-Peptide Interactions
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    Chapter 4 Template-Based Prediction of Protein-Peptide Interactions by Using GalaxyPepDock
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    Chapter 5 Application of the ATTRACT Coarse-Grained Docking and Atomistic Refinement for Predicting Peptide-Protein Interactions
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    Chapter 6 Highly Flexible Protein-Peptide Docking Using CABS-Dock
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    Chapter 7 AnchorDock for Blind Flexible Docking of Peptides to Proteins
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    Chapter 8 Information-Driven, Ensemble Flexible Peptide Docking Using HADDOCK
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    Chapter 9 Modeling Peptide-Protein Structure and Binding Using Monte Carlo Sampling Approaches: Rosetta FlexPepDock and FlexPepBind
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    Chapter 10 Flexible Backbone Methods for Predicting and Designing Peptide Specificity
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    Chapter 11 Simplifying the Design of Protein-Peptide Interaction Specificity with Sequence-Based Representations of Atomistic Models
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    Chapter 12 Binding Specificity Profiles from Computational Peptide Screening
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    Chapter 13 Enriching Peptide Libraries for Binding Affinity and Specificity Through Computationally Directed Library Design
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    Chapter 14 Investigating Protein–Peptide Interactions Using the Schrödinger Computational Suite
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    Chapter 15 Identifying Loop-Mediated Protein–Protein Interactions Using LoopFinder
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    Chapter 16 Protein-Peptide Interaction Design: PepCrawler and PinaColada
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    Chapter 17 Modeling and Design of Peptidomimetics to Modulate Protein–Protein Interactions
Attention for Chapter 11: Simplifying the Design of Protein-Peptide Interaction Specificity with Sequence-Based Representations of Atomistic Models
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Chapter title
Simplifying the Design of Protein-Peptide Interaction Specificity with Sequence-Based Representations of Atomistic Models
Chapter number 11
Book title
Modeling Peptide-Protein Interactions
Published in
Methods in molecular biology, February 2017
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4939-6798-8_11
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4939-6796-4, 978-1-4939-6798-8
Authors

Fan Zheng, Gevorg Grigoryan

Editors

Ora Schueler-Furman, Nir London

Abstract

Computationally designed peptides targeting protein-protein interaction interfaces are of great interest as reagents for biological research and potential therapeutics. In recent years, it has been shown that detailed structure-based calculations can, in favorable cases, describe relevant determinants of protein-peptide recognition. Yet, despite large increases in available computing power, such accurate modeling of the binding reaction is still largely outside the realm of protein design. The chief limitation is in the large sequence spaces generally involved in protein design problems, such that it is typically infeasible to apply expensive modeling techniques to score each sequence. Toward addressing this issue, we have previously shown that by explicitly evaluating the scores of a relatively small number of sequences, it is possible to synthesize a direct mapping between sequences and scores, such that the entire sequence space can be analyzed extremely rapidly. The associated method, called Cluster Expansion, has been used in a number of studies to design binding affinity and specificity. In this chapter, we provide instructions and guidance for applying this technique in the context of designing protein-peptide interactions to enable the use of more detailed and expensive scoring approaches than is typically possible.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 8 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 8 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 2 25%
Professor 2 25%
Other 1 13%
Student > Ph. D. Student 1 13%
Student > Postgraduate 1 13%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 1 13%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 2 25%
Computer Science 2 25%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 1 13%
Psychology 1 13%
Unknown 2 25%