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Dive into the research topics where Patrice Koehl is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrice Koehl.


Genome Biology | 2006

Plant NBS-LRR proteins: adaptable guards

Leah K. McHale; Xiaoping Tan; Patrice Koehl; Richard W. Michelmore

The majority of disease resistance genes in plants encode nucleotide-binding site leucine-rich repeat (NBS-LRR) proteins. This large family is encoded by hundreds of diverse genes per genome and can be subdivided into the functionally distinct TIR-domain-containing (TNL) and CC-domain-containing (CNL) subfamilies. Their precise role in recognition is unknown; however, they are thought to monitor the status of plant proteins that are targeted by pathogen effectors.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

The ASTRAL Compendium in 2004

John-Marc Chandonia; Gary Chung Hon; Nigel S. Walker; Loredana Lo Conte; Patrice Koehl; Michael Levitt; Steven E. Brenner

The ASTRAL Compendium provides several databases and tools to aid in the analysis of protein structures, particularly through the use of their sequences. Partially derived from the SCOP database of protein structure domains, it includes sequences for each domain and other resources useful for studying these sequences and domain structures. The current release of ASTRAL contains 54,745 domains, more than three times as many as the initial release 4 years ago. ASTRAL has undergone major transformations in the past 2 years. In addition to several complete updates each year, ASTRAL is now updated on a weekly basis with preliminary classifications of domains from newly released PDB structures. These classifications are available as a stand-alone database, as well as integrated into other ASTRAL databases such as representative subsets. To enhance the utility of ASTRAL to structural biologists, all SCOP domains are now made available as PDB-style coordinate files as well as sequences. In addition to sequences and representative subsets based on SCOP domains, sequences and subsets based on PDB chains are newly included in ASTRAL. Several search tools have been added to ASTRAL to facilitate retrieval of data by individual users and automated methods. ASTRAL may be accessed at http://astral.stanford. edu/.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2000

The ASTRAL compendium for protein structure and sequence analysis

Steven E. Brenner; Patrice Koehl; Michael Levitt

The ASTRAL compendium provides several databases and tools to aid in the analysis of protein structures, particularly through the use of their sequences. The SPACI scores included in the system summarize the overall characteristics of a protein structure. A structural alignments database indicates residue equivalencies in superimposed protein domain structures. The PDB sequence-map files provide a linkage between the amino acid sequence of the molecule studied (SEQRES records in a database entry) and the sequence of the atoms experimentally observed in the structure (ATOM records). These maps are combined with information in the SCOPdatabase to provide sequences of protein domains. Selected subsets of the domain database, with varying degrees of similarity measured in several different ways, are also available. ASTRALmay be accessed at http://astral.stanford.edu/


Proteins | 2005

BAliBASE 3.0: Latest developments of the multiple sequence alignment benchmark

Julie D. Thompson; Patrice Koehl; Raymond Ripp; Olivier Poch

Multiple sequence alignment is one of the cornerstones of modern molecular biology. It is used to identify conserved motifs, to determine protein domains, in 2D/3D structure prediction by homology and in evolutionary studies. Recently, high‐throughput technologies such as genome sequencing and structural proteomics have lead to an explosion in the amount of sequence and structure information available. In response, several new multiple alignment methods have been developed that improve both the efficiency and the quality of protein alignments. Consequently, the benchmarks used to evaluate and compare these methods must also evolve. We present here the latest release of the most widely used multiple alignment benchmark, BAliBASE, which provides high quality, manually refined, reference alignments based on 3D structural superpositions. Version 3.0 of BAliBASE includes new, more challenging test cases, representing the real problems encountered when aligning large sets of complex sequences. Using a novel, semiautomatic update protocol, the number of protein families in the benchmark has been increased and representative test cases are now available that cover most of the protein fold space. The total number of proteins in BAliBASE has also been significantly increased from 1444 to 6255 sequences. In addition, full‐length sequences are now provided for all test cases, which represent difficult cases for both global and local alignment programs. Finally, the BAliBASE Web site (http://www‐bio3d‐igbmc.u‐strasbg.fr/balibase) has been completely redesigned to provide a more user‐friendly, interactive interface for the visualization of the BAliBASE reference alignments and the associated annotations. Proteins 2005.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

NOMAD-Ref : visualization, deformation and refinement of macromolecular structures based on all-atom normal mode analysis.

Erik Lindahl; Cyril Azuara; Patrice Koehl; Marc Delarue

Normal mode analysis (NMA) is an efficient way to study collective motions in biomolecules that bypasses the computational costs and many limitations associated with full dynamics simulations. The NOMAD-Ref web server presented here provides tools for online calculation of the normal modes of large molecules (up to 100 000 atoms) maintaining a full all-atom representation of their structures, as well as access to a number of programs that utilize these collective motions for deformation and refinement of biomolecular structures. Applications include the generation of sets of decoys with correct stereochemistry but arbitrary large amplitude movements, the quantification of the overlap between alternative conformations of a molecule, refinement of structures against experimental data, such as X-ray diffraction structure factors or Cryo-EM maps and optimization of docked complexes by modeling receptor/ligand flexibility through normal mode motions. The server can be accessed at the URL .


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Small Libraries of Protein Fragments Model Native Protein Structures Accurately

Rachel Kolodny; Patrice Koehl; Leonidas J. Guibas; Michael Levitt

Prediction of protein structure depends on the accuracy and complexity of the models used. Here, we represent the polypeptide chain by a sequence of rigid fragments that are concatenated without any degrees of freedom. Fragments chosen from a library of representative fragments are fit to the native structure using a greedy build-up method. This gives a one-dimensional representation of native protein three-dimensional structure whose quality depends on the nature of the library. We use a novel clustering method to construct libraries that differ in the fragment length (four to seven residues) and number of representative fragments they contain (25-300). Each library is characterized by the quality of fit (accuracy) and the number of allowed states per residue (complexity). We find that the accuracy depends on the complexity and varies from 2.9A for a 2.7-state model on the basis of fragments of length 7-0.76A for a 15-state model on the basis of fragments of length 5. Our goal is to find representations that are both accurate and economical (low complexity). The models defined here are substantially better in this regard: with ten states per residue we approximate native protein structure to 1A compared to over 20 states per residue needed previously. For the same complexity, we find that longer fragments provide better fits. Unfortunately, libraries of longer fragments must be much larger (for ten states per residue, a seven-residue library is 100 times larger than a five-residue library). As the number of known protein native structures increases, it will be possible to construct larger libraries to better exploit this correlation between neighboring residues. Our fragment libraries, which offer a wide range of optimal fragments suited to different accuracies of fit, may prove to be useful for generating better decoy sets for ab initio protein folding and for generating accurate loop conformations in homology modeling.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2001

Protein structure similarities.

Patrice Koehl

Comparison of protein structures can reveal distant evolutionary relationships that would not be detected by sequence information alone. This helps to infer functional properties. In recent years, many methods for pairwise protein structure alignment have been proposed and are now available on the World Wide Web. Although these methods have made it possible to compare all available protein structures, they also highlight the remaining difficulties in defining a reliable score for protein structure similarities.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 1999

A brighter future for protein structure prediction

Patrice Koehl; Michael Levitt

The most recent critical assessment of structure prediction meeting (CASP3) revealed significant progress in predicting the three–dimensional folds of proteins with unknown structures.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

Structural basis for ion permeation mechanism in pentameric ligand‐gated ion channels

Ludovic Sauguet; Frédéric Poitevin; Samuel Murail; Catherine Van Renterghem; Gustavo Moraga-Cid; Laurie Malherbe; Andrew Thompson; Patrice Koehl; Pierre-Jean Corringer; Marc Baaden; Marc Delarue

To understand the molecular mechanism of ion permeation in pentameric ligand‐gated ion channels (pLGIC), we solved the structure of an open form of GLIC, a prokaryotic pLGIC, at 2.4 Å. Anomalous diffraction data were used to place bound anions and cations. This reveals ordered water molecules at the level of two rings of hydroxylated residues (named Ser6′ and Thr2′) that contribute to the ion selectivity filter. Two water pentagons are observed, a self‐stabilized ice‐like water pentagon and a second wider water pentagon, with one sodium ion between them. Single‐channel electrophysiology shows that the side‐chain hydroxyl of Ser6′ is crucial for ion translocation. Simulations and electrostatics calculations complemented the description of hydration in the pore and suggest that the water pentagons observed in the crystal are important for the ion to cross hydrophobic constriction barriers. Simulations that pull a cation through the pore reveal that residue Ser6′ actively contributes to ion translocation by reorienting its side chain when the ion is going through the pore. Generalization of these findings to the pLGIC family is proposed.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 1996

Mean-field minimization methods for biological macromolecules.

Patrice Koehl; Marc Delarue

Simulations of macromolecular structures involve the minimization of a potential-energy function that presents many local minima. Mean-field theory provides a tool that enables us to escape these minima, by enhancing sampling in conformational space. The number of applications of this technique has increased significantly over the past year, enabling problems with protein-homology modelling and inverted protein structure prediction to be solved.

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Henri Orland

French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission

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Jean-François Lefèvre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Joel Hass

University of California

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Olivier Poch

University of Strasbourg

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Robert P. P. Fuchs

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bruno Kieffer

University of Strasbourg

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