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Dive into the research topics where Frank DiMaio is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank DiMaio.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Crystal structure of a monomeric retroviral protease solved by protein folding game players

Firas Khatib; Frank DiMaio; Seth Cooper; Maciej Kazmierczyk; Miroslaw Gilski; Szymon Krzywda; Helena Zábranská; Iva Pichová; James Thompson; Zoran Popović; Mariusz Jaskolski; David Baker

Following the failure of a wide range of attempts to solve the crystal structure of M-PMV retroviral protease by molecular replacement, we challenged players of the protein folding game Foldit to produce accurate models of the protein. Remarkably, Foldit players were able to generate models of sufficient quality for successful molecular replacement and subsequent structure determination. The refined structure provides new insights for the design of antiretroviral drugs.


Proteins | 2009

Structure prediction for CASP8 with all-atom refinement using Rosetta

Srivatsan Raman; Robert B. Vernon; James Thompson; Michael D. Tyka; Ruslan I. Sadreyev; Jimin Pei; David E. Kim; Elizabeth H. Kellogg; Frank DiMaio; Oliver F. Lange; Lisa N. Kinch; Will Sheffler; Bong Hyun Kim; Rhiju Das; Nick V. Grishin; David Baker

We describe predictions made using the Rosetta structure prediction methodology for the Eighth Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction. Aggressive sampling and all‐atom refinement were carried out for nearly all targets. A combination of alignment methodologies was used to generate starting models from a range of templates, and the models were then subjected to Rosetta all atom refinement. For the 64 domains with readily identified templates, the best submitted model was better than the best alignment to the best template in the Protein Data Bank for 24 cases, and improved over the best starting model for 43 cases. For 13 targets where only very distant sequence relationships to proteins of known structure were detected, models were generated using the Rosetta de novo structure prediction methodology followed by all‐atom refinement; in several cases the submitted models were better than those based on the available templates. Of the 12 refinement challenges, the best submitted model improved on the starting model in seven cases. These improvements over the starting template‐based models and refinement tests demonstrate the power of Rosetta structure refinement in improving model accuracy. Proteins 2009.


Structure | 2013

High resolution comparative modeling with RosettaCM

Yifan Song; Frank DiMaio; Raymond Y. Wang; David E. Kim; Chris Miles; T. J. Brunette; James Thompson; David Baker

We describe an improved method for comparative modeling, RosettaCM, which optimizes a physically realistic all-atom energy function over the conformational space defined by homologous structures. Given a set of sequence alignments, RosettaCM assembles topologies by recombining aligned segments in Cartesian space and building unaligned regions de novo in torsion space. The junctions between segments are regularized using a loop closure method combining fragment superposition with gradient-based minimization. The energies of the resulting models are optimized by all-atom refinement, and the most representative low-energy model is selected. The CASP10 experiment suggests that RosettaCM yields models with more accurate side-chain and backbone conformations than other methods when the sequence identity to the templates is greater than ∼15%.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Refinement of Protein Structures into Low-Resolution Density Maps Using Rosetta

Frank DiMaio; Michael D. Tyka; Matthew L. Baker; Wah Chiu; David Baker

We describe a method based on Rosetta structure refinement for generating high-resolution, all-atom protein models from electron cryomicroscopy density maps. A local measure of the fit of a model to the density is used to directly guide structure refinement and to identify regions incompatible with the density that are then targeted for extensive rebuilding. Over a range of test cases using both simulated and experimentally generated data, the method consistently increases the accuracy of starting models generated either by comparative modeling or by hand-tracing the density. The method can achieve near-atomic resolution starting from density maps at 4-6 A resolution.


Nature | 2011

Improved molecular replacement by density- and energy-guided protein structure optimization

Frank DiMaio; Thomas C. Terwilliger; Randy J. Read; Alexander Wlodawer; Gustav Oberdorfer; Ulrike Wagner; Eugene Valkov; Assaf Alon; Deborah Fass; Herbert L. Axelrod; Debanu Das; Sergey M. Vorobiev; Hideo Iwai; P. Raj Pokkuluri; David Baker

Molecular replacement procedures, which search for placements of a starting model within the crystallographic unit cell that best account for the measured diffraction amplitudes, followed by automatic chain tracing methods, have allowed the rapid solution of large numbers of protein crystal structures. Despite extensive work, molecular replacement or the subsequent rebuilding usually fail with more divergent starting models based on remote homologues with less than 30% sequence identity. Here we show that this limitation can be substantially reduced by combining algorithms for protein structure modelling with those developed for crystallographic structure determination. An approach integrating Rosetta structure modelling with Autobuild chain tracing yielded high-resolution structures for 8 of 13 X-ray diffraction data sets that could not be solved in the laboratories of expert crystallographers and that remained unsolved after application of an extensive array of alternative approaches. We estimate that the new method should allow rapid structure determination without experimental phase information for over half the cases where current methods fail, given diffraction data sets of better than 3.2 Å resolution, four or fewer copies in the asymmetric unit, and the availability of structures of homologous proteins with >20% sequence identity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Structural basis for scaffolding-mediated assembly and maturation of a dsDNA virus

Dong Hua Chen; Matthew L. Baker; Corey F. Hryc; Frank DiMaio; Joanita Jakana; Weimin Wu; Matthew Dougherty; Cameron Haase-Pettingell; Michael F. Schmid; Wen Jiang; David Baker; Jonathan King; Wah Chiu

Formation of many dsDNA viruses begins with the assembly of a procapsid, containing scaffolding proteins and a multisubunit portal but lacking DNA, which matures into an infectious virion. This process, conserved among dsDNA viruses such as herpes viruses and bacteriophages, is key to forming infectious virions. Bacteriophage P22 has served as a model system for this study in the past several decades. However, how capsid assembly is initiated, where and how scaffolding proteins bind to coat proteins in the procapsid, and the conformational changes upon capsid maturation still remain elusive. Here, we report Cα backbone models for the P22 procapsid and infectious virion derived from electron cryomicroscopy density maps determined at 3.8- and 4.0-Å resolution, respectively, and the first procapsid structure at subnanometer resolution without imposing symmetry. The procapsid structures show the scaffolding protein interacting electrostatically with the N terminus (N arm) of the coat protein through its C-terminal helix-loop-helix motif, as well as unexpected interactions between 10 scaffolding proteins and the 12-fold portal located at a unique vertex. These suggest a critical role for the scaffolding proteins both in initiating the capsid assembly at the portal vertex and propagating its growth on a T = 7 icosahedral lattice. Comparison of the procapsid and the virion backbone models reveals coordinated and complex conformational changes. These structural observations allow us to propose a more detailed molecular mechanism for the scaffolding-mediated capsid assembly initiation including portal incorporation, release of scaffolding proteins upon DNA packaging, and maturation into infectious virions.


Nature Methods | 2015

Atomic-accuracy models from 4.5-A cryo-electron microscopy data with density-guided iterative local refinement

Frank DiMaio; Yifan Song; Xueming Li; Matthias J Brunner; Chunfu Xu; Vincent P. Conticello; Edward H. Egelman; Thomas C Marlovits; Yifan Cheng; David Baker

We describe a general approach for refining protein structure models on the basis of cryo-electron microscopy maps with near-atomic resolution. The method integrates Monte Carlo sampling with local density-guided optimization, Rosetta all-atom refinement and real-space B-factor fitting. In tests on experimental maps of three different systems with 4.5-Å resolution or better, the method consistently produced models with atomic-level accuracy largely independently of starting-model quality, and it outperformed the molecular dynamics–based MDFF method. Cross-validated model quality statistics correlated with model accuracy over the three test systems.


Nature Methods | 2015

EMRinger: side chain–directed model and map validation for 3D cryo-electron microscopy

Benjamin A Barad; Nathaniel Echols; Raymond Y. Wang; Yifan Cheng; Frank DiMaio; Paul D. Adams; J.S. Fraser

Advances in high-resolution cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) require the development of validation metrics to independently assess map quality and model geometry. We report EMRinger, a tool that assesses the precise fitting of an atomic model into the map during refinement and shows how radiation damage alters scattering from negatively charged amino acids. EMRinger (https://github.com/fraser-lab/EMRinger) will be useful for monitoring progress in resolving and modeling high-resolution features in cryo-EM.


Cell | 2015

Structure of the Type VI Secretion System Contractile Sheath

Mikhail Kudryashev; Raymond Y. Wang; Maximilian Brackmann; Sebastian Scherer; Timm Maier; David Baker; Frank DiMaio; Henning Stahlberg; Edward H. Egelman; Marek Basler

Bacteria use rapid contraction of a long sheath of the type VI secretion system (T6SS) to deliver effectors into a target cell. Here, we present an atomic-resolution structure of a native contracted Vibrio cholerae sheath determined by cryo-electron microscopy. The sheath subunits, composed of tightly interacting proteins VipA and VipB, assemble into a six-start helix. The helix is stabilized by a core domain assembled from four β strands donated by one VipA and two VipB molecules. The fold of inner and middle layers is conserved between T6SS and phage sheaths. However, the structure of the outer layer is distinct and suggests a mechanism of interaction of the bacterial sheath with an accessory ATPase, ClpV, that facilitates multiple rounds of effector delivery. Our results provide a mechanistic insight into assembly of contractile nanomachines that bacteria and phages use to translocate macromolecules across membranes.


Science | 2014

High thermodynamic stability of parametrically designed helical bundles

Po-Ssu Huang; Gustav Oberdorfer; Chunfu Xu; Xue Y. Pei; Brent L. Nannenga; Joseph M. Rogers; Frank DiMaio; Tamir Gonen; Ben F. Luisi; David Baker

Building with alphahelical coiled coils Understanding how proteins fold into well-defined three-dimensional structures has been a longstanding challenge. Increased understanding has led to increased success at designing proteins that mimic existing protein folds. This raises the possibility of custom design of proteins with structures not seen in nature. Thomson et al. describe the design of channelcontaining α-helical barrels, and Huang et al. designed hyperstable helical bundles. Both groups used rational and computational design to make new protein structures based on α-helical coiled coils but took different routes to reach different target structures. Science, this issue p. 485, p. 481 Protein design expands the repertoire of coiled-coil structures to α-helical barrels and hyperstable helical bundles. We describe a procedure for designing proteins with backbones produced by varying the parameters in the Crick coiled coil–generating equations. Combinatorial design calculations identify low-energy sequences for alternative helix supercoil arrangements, and the helices in the lowest-energy arrangements are connected by loop building. We design an antiparallel monomeric untwisted three-helix bundle with 80-residue helices, an antiparallel monomeric right-handed four-helix bundle, and a pentameric parallel left-handed five-helix bundle. The designed proteins are extremely stable (extrapolated ΔGfold > 60 kilocalories per mole), and their crystal structures are close to those of the design models with nearly identical core packing between the helices. The approach enables the custom design of hyperstable proteins with fine-tuned geometries for a wide range of applications.

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David Baker

University of Washington

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Jude W. Shavlik

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Brandon Frenz

University of Washington

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David E. Kim

University of Washington

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Raymond Y. Wang

Children's Hospital of Orange County

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David Veesler

University of Washington

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