HADDOCK: an information-driven
flexible docking approach
Alexandre M.
J. J. Bonvin, Utrecht University.
In my talk, I will describe
our recently developed information-driven flexible docking approach HADDOCK
(High Ambiguity Driven protein protein DOCKing) (http://www.nmr.chem.uu.nl/haddock),
that makes use of biochemical and/or biophysical information. The experimental
information is introduced as highly ambiguous interaction restraints (AIRs)
to drive the docking process.
HADDOCK uses an all-atom
representation of the system. Flexibility is accounted for in different
ways during the docking protocol:
i) in the initial rigid body energy minimization
stage by starting the docking from ensembles of conformations (e.g. a NMR
ensemble of structures, snapshots from a MD simulation)
ii) during the semi-flexible simulated
annealing refinement stage by allowing flexibility at the interface first,
only for side-chain atoms, and then, for both side-chain and backbone atoms
iii) in the final SA refinement in explicit
water by progressively allowing flexibility in the remaining of the system
in addition to the defined, flexible interface.
Reference:
- Dominguez, C. Boelens, R. and Bonvin,
A.M.J.J. (2003). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 113. 1731