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Featured researches published by Adam K. Sieradzan.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Lessons from application of the UNRES force field to predictions of structures of CASP10 targets

Yi He; Magdalena A. Mozolewska; Paweł Krupa; Adam K. Sieradzan; Tomasz Wirecki; Adam Liwo; Khatuna Kachlishvili; Shalom Rackovsky; Dawid Jagieła; Rafał Ślusarz; Cezary Czaplewski; Stanisław Ołdziej; Harold A. Scheraga

Significance With the example of the coarse-grained United Residue model of polypeptide chains, this paper demonstrates that the physics-based approach for protein-structure prediction can lead to exceptionally good results when correct domain packing is an issue, even for a highly homologous target. The reason for this is probably that emphasis is placed on energetically favorable residue–residue interactions, including those with residues in relatively flexible linker regions; these regions are usually very different in the target compared with those of proteins in the databases used for template-based modeling. The results suggest that a combination of bioinformatics and a physics-based approach could result in a major increase in the prediction capacity of existing approaches. The performance of the physics-based protocol, whose main component is the United Residue (UNRES) physics-based coarse-grained force field, developed in our laboratory for the prediction of protein structure from amino acid sequence, is illustrated. Candidate models are selected, based on probabilities of the conformational families determined by multiplexed replica-exchange simulations, from the 10th Community Wide Experiment on the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP10). For target T0663, classified as a new fold, which consists of two domains homologous to those of known proteins, UNRES predicted the correct symmetry of packing, in which the domains are rotated with respect to each other by 180° in the experimental structure. By contrast, models obtained by knowledge-based methods, in which each domain is modeled very accurately but not rotated, resulted in incorrect packing. Two UNRES models of this target were featured by the assessors. Correct domain packing was also predicted by UNRES for the homologous target T0644, which has a similar structure to that of T0663, except that the two domains are not rotated. Predictions for two other targets, T0668 and T0684_D2, are among the best ones by global distance test score. These results suggest that our physics-based method has substantial predictive power. In particular, it has the ability to predict domain–domain orientations, which is a significant advance in the state of the art.


Journal of Molecular Modeling | 2014

A unified coarse-grained model of biological macromolecules based on mean-field multipole–multipole interactions

Adam Liwo; Maciej Baranowski; Cezary Czaplewski; Ewa I. Gołaś; Yi He; Dawid Jagieła; Paweł Krupa; Maciej Maciejczyk; Mariusz Makowski; Magdalena A. Mozolewska; Andrei Niadzvedtski; Stanisław Ołdziej; Harold A. Scheraga; Adam K. Sieradzan; Rafał Ślusarz; Tomasz Wirecki; Yanping Yin; Bartłomiej Zaborowski

AbstractA unified coarse-grained model of three major classes of biological molecules—proteins, nucleic acids, and polysaccharides—has been developed. It is based on the observations that the repeated units of biopolymers (peptide groups, nucleic acid bases, sugar rings) are highly polar and their charge distributions can be represented crudely as point multipoles. The model is an extension of the united residue (UNRES) coarse-grained model of proteins developed previously in our laboratory. The respective force fields are defined as the potentials of mean force of biomacromolecules immersed in water, where all degrees of freedom not considered in the model have been averaged out. Reducing the representation to one center per polar interaction site leads to the representation of average site–site interactions as mean-field dipole–dipole interactions. Further expansion of the potentials of mean force of biopolymer chains into Kubo’s cluster-cumulant series leads to the appearance of mean-field dipole–dipole interactions, averaged in the context of local interactions within a biopolymer unit. These mean-field interactions account for the formation of regular structures encountered in biomacromolecules, e.g., α-helices and β-sheets in proteins, double helices in nucleic acids, and helicoidally packed structures in polysaccharides, which enables us to use a greatly reduced number of interacting sites without sacrificing the ability to reproduce the correct architecture. This reduction results in an extension of the simulation timescale by more than four orders of magnitude compared to the all-atom representation. Examples of the performance of the model are presented. FigureComponents of the Unified Coarse Grained Model (UCGM) of biological macromolecules


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2013

Improvement of the Treatment of Loop Structures in the UNRES Force Field by Inclusion of Coupling between Backbone- and Side-Chain-Local Conformational States

Paweł Krupa; Adam K. Sieradzan; S. Rackovsky; Maciej Baranowski; Stanisław Ołldziej; Harold A. Scheraga; Adam Liwo; Cezary Czaplewski

The UNited RESidue (UNRES) coarse-grained model of polypeptide chains, developed in our laboratory, enables us to carry out millisecond-scale molecular-dynamics simulations of large proteins effectively. It performs well in ab initio predictions of protein structure, as demonstrated in the last Community Wide Experiment on the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP10). However, the resolution of the simulated structure is too coarse, especially in loop regions, which results from insufficient specificity of the model of local interactions. To improve the representation of local interactions, in this work we introduced new side-chain-backbone correlation potentials, derived from a statistical analysis of loop regions of 4585 proteins. To obtain sufficient statistics, we reduced the set of amino-acid-residue types to five groups, derived in our earlier work on structurally optimized reduced alphabets, based on a statistical analysis of the properties of amino-acid structures. The new correlation potentials are expressed as one-dimensional Fourier series in the virtual-bond-dihedral angles involving side-chain centroids. The weight of these new terms was determined by a trial-and-error method, in which Multiplexed Replica Exchange Molecular Dynamics (MREMD) simulations were run on selected test proteins. The best average root-mean-square deviations (RMSDs) of the calculated structures from the experimental structures below the folding-transition temperatures were obtained with the weight of the new side-chain-backbone correlation potentials equal to 0.57. The resulting conformational ensembles were analyzed in detail by using the Weighted Histogram Analysis Method (WHAM) and Wards minimum-variance clustering. This analysis showed that the RMSDs from the experimental structures dropped by 0.5 Å on average, compared to simulations without the new terms, and the deviation of individual residues in the loop region of the computed structures from their counterparts in the experimental structures (after optimum superposition of the calculated and experimental structure) decreased by up to 8 Å. Consequently, the new terms improve the representation of local structure.


Proteins | 2014

WeFold: A coopetition for protein structure prediction

George A. Khoury; Adam Liwo; Firas Khatib; Hongyi Zhou; Gaurav Chopra; Jaume Bacardit; Leandro Oliveira Bortot; Rodrigo Antonio Faccioli; Xin Deng; Yi He; Paweł Krupa; Jilong Li; Magdalena A. Mozolewska; Adam K. Sieradzan; James Smadbeck; Tomasz Wirecki; Seth Cooper; Jeff Flatten; Kefan Xu; David Baker; Jianlin Cheng; Alexandre C. B. Delbem; Christodoulos A. Floudas; Chen Keasar; Michael Levitt; Zoran Popović; Harold A. Scheraga; Jeffrey Skolnick; Silvia Crivelli; Foldit Players

The protein structure prediction problem continues to elude scientists. Despite the introduction of many methods, only modest gains were made over the last decade for certain classes of prediction targets. To address this challenge, a social‐media based worldwide collaborative effort, named WeFold, was undertaken by 13 labs. During the collaboration, the laboratories were simultaneously competing with each other. Here, we present the first attempt at “coopetition” in scientific research applied to the protein structure prediction and refinement problems. The coopetition was possible by allowing the participating labs to contribute different components of their protein structure prediction pipelines and create new hybrid pipelines that they tested during CASP10. This manuscript describes both successes and areas needing improvement as identified throughout the first WeFold experiment and discusses the efforts that are underway to advance this initiative. A footprint of all contributions and structures are publicly accessible at http://www.wefold.org. Proteins 2014; 82:1850–1868.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2015

Physics-based potentials for the coupling between backbone- and side-chain-local conformational states in the united residue (UNRES) force field for protein simulations

Adam K. Sieradzan; Paweł Krupa; Harold A. Scheraga; Adam Liwo; Cezary Czaplewski

The UNited RESidue (UNRES) model of polypeptide chains is a coarse-grained model in which each amino-acid residue is reduced to two interaction sites, namely, a united peptide group (p) located halfway between the two neighboring α-carbon atoms (Cαs), which serve only as geometrical points, and a united side chain (SC) attached to the respective Cα. Owing to this simplification, millisecond molecular dynamics simulations of large systems can be performed. While UNRES predicts overall folds well, it reproduces the details of local chain conformation with lower accuracy. Recently, we implemented new knowledge-based torsional potentials (Krupa et al. J. Chem. Theory Comput. 2013, 9, 4620–4632) that depend on the virtual-bond dihedral angles involving side chains: Cα···Cα···Cα···SC (τ(1)), SC···Cα···Cα···Cα (τ(2)), and SC···Cα···Cα···SC (τ(3)) in the UNRES force field. These potentials resulted in significant improvement of the simulated structures, especially in the loop regions. In this work, we introduce the physics-based counterparts of these potentials, which we derived from the all-atom energy surfaces of terminally blocked amino-acid residues by Boltzmann integration over the angles λ(1) and λ(2) for rotation about the Cα···Cα virtual-bond angles and over the side-chain angles χ. The energy surfaces were, in turn, calculated by using the semiempirical AM1 method of molecular quantum mechanics. Entropy contribution was evaluated with use of the harmonic approximation from Hessian matrices. One-dimensional Fourier series in the respective virtual-bond-dihedral angles were fitted to the calculated potentials, and these expressions have been implemented in the UNRES force field. Basic calibration of the UNRES force field with the new potentials was carried out with eight training proteins, by selecting the optimal weight of the new energy terms and reducing the weight of the regular torsional terms. The force field was subsequently benchmarked with a set of 22 proteins not used in the calibration. The new potentials result in a decrease of the root-mean-square deviation of the average conformation from the respective experimental structure by 0.86 Å on average; however, improvement of up to 5 Å was observed for some proteins.


FEBS Journal | 2010

Inhibitory activity of double-sequence analogues of trypsin inhibitor SFTI-1 from sunflower seeds: an example of peptide splicing.

Anna Łęgowska; Adam Lesner; Elżbieta Bulak; Anna Jaśkiewicz; Adam K. Sieradzan; Marzena Cydzik; Piotr Stefanowicz; Zbigniew Szewczuk; Krzysztof Rolka

Four 28‐amino acid peptides were synthesized whose sequences comprised two molecules of trypsin inhibitor sunflower trypsin inhibitor 1 (SFTI‐1) bound through a peptide bond. The peptides in their reactive positions (5 and 19 of the peptide chain) contain two Lys ([KK]BiSFTI‐1) and two Phe ([FF]BiSFTI‐1) residues, along with a combination of the amino acid residues named thereafter [KF]BiSFTI‐1 and [FK]BiSFTI‐1. Association constants of the analogues determined with trypsin and chymotrypsin, respectively, indicated that they were potent inhibitors of cognate proteinases. An MS study of the associates revealed that incubation of the compounds with the proteinases resulted in cutting out a fragment of the peptide chain to restore the native monocyclic molecule of SFTI‐1 or its analogue [Phe5]SFTI‐1. This process, analogous to that of the DNA and protein splicing, can be referred to as ‘peptide splicing’.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

A general method for the derivation of the functional forms of the effective energy terms in coarse-grained energy functions of polymers. I. Backbone potentials of coarse-grained polypeptide chains

Adam K. Sieradzan; Mariusz Makowski; A. Augustynowicz; Adam Liwo

A general and systematic method for the derivation of the functional expressions for the effective energy terms in coarse-grained force fields of polymer chains is proposed. The method is based on the expansion of the potential of mean force of the system studied in the cluster-cumulant series and expanding the all-atom energy in the Taylor series in the squares of interatomic distances about the squares of the distances between coarse-grained centers, to obtain approximate analytical expressions for the cluster cumulants. The primary degrees of freedom to average about are the angles for collective rotation of the atoms contained in the coarse-grained interaction sites about the respective virtual-bond axes. The approach has been applied to the revision of the virtual-bond-angle, virtual-bond-torsional, and backbone-local-and-electrostatic correlation potentials for the UNited RESidue (UNRES) model of polypeptide chains, demonstrating the strong dependence of the torsional and correlation potentials on virtual-bond angles, not considered in the current UNRES. The theoretical considerations are illustrated with the potentials calculated from the ab initiopotential-energysurface of terminally blocked alanine by numerical integration and with the statistical potentials derived from known protein structures. The revised torsional potentials correctly indicate that virtual-bond angles close to 90° result in the preference for the turn and helical structures, while large virtual-bond angles result in the preference for polyproline II and extended backbone geometry. The revised correlation potentials correctly reproduce the preference for the formation of β-sheet structures for large values of virtual-bond angles and for the formation of α-helical structures for virtual-bond angles close to 90°.


Physical Review E | 2016

Bloch spin waves and emergent structure in protein folding with HIV envelope glycoprotein as an example

Jin Dai; Antti J. Niemi; Jianfeng He; Adam K. Sieradzan; Nevena Ilieva

We inquire how structure emerges during the process of protein folding. For this we scrutinize collective many-atom motions during all-atom molecular dynamics simulations. We introduce, develop, and employ various topological techniques, in combination with analytic tools that we deduce from the concept of integrable models and structure of discrete nonlinear Schrödinger equation. The example we consider is an α-helical subunit of the HIV envelope glycoprotein gp41. The helical structure is stable when the subunit is part of the biological oligomer. But in isolation, the helix becomes unstable, and the monomer starts deforming. We follow the process computationally. We interpret the evolving structure both in terms of a backbone based Heisenberg spin chain and in terms of a side chain based XY spin chain. We find that in both cases the formation of protein supersecondary structure is akin the formation of a topological Bloch domain wall along a spin chain. During the process we identify three individual Bloch walls and we show that each of them can be modelled with a precision of tenths to several angstroms in terms of a soliton solution to a discrete nonlinear Schrödinger equation.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2014

Revised Backbone-Virtual-Bond-Angle Potentials to Treat the l- and d-Amino Acid Residues in the Coarse-Grained United Residue (UNRES) Force Field

Adam K. Sieradzan; Andrei Niadzvedtski; Harold A. Scheraga; Adam Liwo

Continuing our effort to introduce d-amino-acid residues in the united residue (UNRES) force field developed in our laboratory, in this work the Cα ··· Cα ··· Cα backbone-virtual-bond-valence-angle (θ) potentials for systems containing d-amino-acid residues have been developed. The potentials were determined by integrating the combined energy surfaces of all possible triplets of terminally blocked glycine, alanine, and proline obtained with ab initio molecular quantum mechanics at the MP2/6-31G(d,p) level to calculate the corresponding potentials of mean force (PMFs). Subsequently, analytical expressions were fitted to the PMFs to give the virtual-bond-valence potentials to be used in UNRES. Alanine represented all types of amino-acid residues except glycine and proline. The blocking groups were either the N-acetyl and N′,N′-dimethyl or N-acetyl and pyrrolidyl group, depending on whether the residue next in sequence was an alanine-type or a proline residue. A total of 126 potentials (63 symmetry-unrelated potentials for each set of terminally blocking groups) were determined. Together with the torsional, double-torsional, and side-chain-rotamer potentials for polypeptide chains containing d-amino-acid residues determined in our earlier work (Sieradzan et al. J. Chem. Theory Comput., 2012, 8, 4746), the new virtual-bond-angle (θ) potentials now constitute the complete set of physics-based potentials with which to run coarse-grained simulations of systems containing d-amino-acid residues. The ability of the extended UNRES force field to reproduce thermodynamics of polypeptide systems with d-amino-acid residues was tested by comparing the experimentally measured and the calculated free energies of helix formation of model KLALKLALxxLKLALKLA peptides, where x denotes any d- or l- amino-acid residue. The obtained results demonstrate that the UNRES force field with the new potentials reproduce the changes of free energies of helix formation upon d-substitution but overestimate the free energies of helix formation. To test the ability of UNRES with the new potentials to reproduce the structures of polypeptides with d-amino-acid residues, an ab initio replica-exchange folding simulation of thurincin H from Bacillus thuringiensis, which has d-amino-acid residues in the sequence, was carried out. UNRES was able to locate the native α-helical hairpin structure as the dominant structure even though no native sulfide–carbon bonds were present in the simulation.


Journal of Molecular Modeling | 2015

Studies of conformational changes of an arginine-binding protein from Thermotoga maritima in the presence and absence of ligand via molecular dynamics simulations with the coarse-grained UNRES force field

Agnieszka G. Lipska; Adam K. Sieradzan; Paweł Krupa; Magdalena A. Mozolewska; Sabato d’Auria; Adam Liwo

The arginine-binding protein (ArgBP) from the hyperthermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga maritima (TmArgBP) is responsible for arginine transport through the bacterial cell membrane. The protein binds a single molecule of l-arginine, which results in conformational changes due to hinge bending. Thereby, TmArgBP acquires one of two possible conformations: open (without the presence of the arginine ligand) and closed (in the presence of the arginine ligand). Here we report a molecular dynamics study of the influence of the presence or absence of the ligand on the dynamics of TmArgBP, using the coarse-grained UNRES force field. The results of our studies indicate that binding of the arginine ligand promotes a closed conformation, which agrees with experimental data. However, the sensitivity of the TmArgBP conformation to the presence of arginine decreases and the protein becomes more flexible with increasing temperature, which might be related to the functionality of this protein in the thermophilic organism T. maritima.

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Adam Liwo

University of Gdańsk

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Yi He

Cornell University

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Antti J. Niemi

François Rabelais University

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