Enhancing cryo-EM structure prediction with DeepTracer and AlphaFold2 integration.

Journal: Briefings in bioinformatics
Published Date:

Abstract

Understanding the protein structures is invaluable in various biomedical applications, such as vaccine development. Protein structure model building from experimental electron density maps is a time-consuming and labor-intensive task. To address the challenge, machine learning approaches have been proposed to automate this process. Currently, the majority of the experimental maps in the database lack atomic resolution features, making it challenging for machine learning-based methods to precisely determine protein structures from cryogenic electron microscopy density maps. On the other hand, protein structure prediction methods, such as AlphaFold2, leverage evolutionary information from protein sequences and have recently achieved groundbreaking accuracy. However, these methods often require manual refinement, which is labor intensive and time consuming. In this study, we present DeepTracer-Refine, an automated method that refines AlphaFold predicted structures by aligning them to DeepTracers modeled structure. Our method was evaluated on 39 multi-domain proteins and we improved the average residue coverage from 78.2 to 90.0% and average local Distance Difference Test score from 0.67 to 0.71. We also compared DeepTracer-Refine with Phenixs AlphaFold refinement and demonstrated that our method not only performs better when the initial AlphaFold model is less precise but also surpasses Phenix in run-time performance.

Authors

  • Jason Chen
    Division of Computing and Software Systems, University of Washington Bothell, Bothell, WA 98011, United States.
  • Ayisha Zia
    Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233, USA.
  • Albert Luo
    Division of Computing and Software Systems, University of Washington Bothell, Bothell, WA 98011, USA.
  • Hanze Meng
    Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
  • Fengbin Wang
    Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35233, USA.
  • Jie Hou
    Department of Computer Science, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, 65211, USA.
  • Renzhi Cao
    Department of Computer Science, Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, WA, 98447, USA.
  • Dong Si