Protein Structure Exploration
Protein Structure Exploration
OUTLINE
Exercise 1
Step 4: More Viewing Tools: Slabs, Selecting Specific Residues and Ramachandran Plots
To start, we need a PDB file and the Swiss PDB-Viewer. Open a web browser of your choice and
follow the link below to the Protein Data Bank website. Also open the Swiss PDB Viewer program.
1. In the search box enter bovine beta trypsin and press the search button.
You should find that there are many entries for this query. These include many structures of bovine beta-
trypsin, trypsin inhibitors and also structures with bovine beta-trypsin complexed with several
inhibitors. We want a particular structure so follow step 2.
2. In the search box enter 1TPP
You should find one entry on the results page. This is the entry that we will work with during this
exercise. You will need to download the .pdb file, get information about this structure from the .pdb file
and view the structure using the Swiss PDB Viewer.
4.
1. Open the Swiss PDB-Viewer. If you do not have this program on your computer you can
download it from the SwissPDBViewer site. It is available for Mac and PC. The controls for
these programs look similar, but are not entirely identical. This tutorial was generated using the
Mac version that we have loaded into the computers in the CCMML.
2. Run the SwissPDB Viewer program (choose the appropriate folder in the Applications folder on
the Mac, select the appropriate folder on a PC). You should see a program bar appear that looks
like this:
3. In the file menu click on Open in the menu options at the top of the screen and choose the 1TPP
file you just downloaded.
4. The structure of 1TPP should appear as well as a text file (a log file) that will appear on top of
the program bar. Close this text window so that what you see is the program bar and the stick-
model of the protein structure in the window below the bar. You should now have something
that looks like this:
5. To view the .pdb text file for this structure click on the little "page" icon in the top left of the
program bar.
This opens the .pdb text file in a new window. You can get a lot of information about your protein and
this structure from this file. You will need a lot of this information to complete the protein structure
assignment.
On the page with the pdb file listed, you can explore the raw data that will
be converted into your great-looking 3-D images in a couple minutes. This
may look confusing at first. Remember that this info is set down in a
particular format so that all structures can be displayed, archived and
understood in the same fashion. Some of the important line items and their
descriptions are listed below:
ATOM
SSBOND
SHEET
HELIX
HET
SEQRES
REMARK
JRNL
AUTHOR
SOURCE
COMPND
Gives a basic description of
the structure
HEADER
Step 3. Working with Deep View Tools: The Control Panel, Rotation Tools and
Changing Colors
Next we will work with this structure. Our initial goal will be the generation of a ribbon diagram and a
space-filled diagram that highlights some key structural features of trypsin. It is helpful to be familiar
with the basics of the mechanism of serine proteases. If you do not remember this from Chem 371 then
review this in your Lehninger text. In this text the mechanism of the serine proteases is examined using
chymotrypsin, the mechanism of trypsin is similar and also uses the classical catalytic triad (Ser, His,
Asp) however the specificity of trypsin is different, it cleaves following basic amino acid residues.
During our exercise we will examine the structure of the inhibitor that is bound within the active site
and understand why it is bound where it is bound and what aspects of the natural substrate it mimics.
NOTE: Depending on the speed of your computer and its graphics capabilities you may or may not
want to toggle on the 3D rendering options in your window. To turn these features on go to the Display
menu and turn on 'Render in Solid 3D' and 'Use OpenGL rendering.' You can play with these options to
see which (or both on better computers) works best with your system. If neither works well, turning
these features on only when you are finished working with the model (rotating, coloring etc.) or want to
briefly see your model will work.
Deep View operates in as a series of windows. This is useful because you can open and close the windows as
you need them. The main toolbar will always be open. It looks like this:
The other windows are opened from the Window menu ("Win") located at the top right. These will open as
independent windows and can be opened and closed at any time.
K
J
I
H
G
F
E
D
C
B
This check-box
toggles the
visibility of the
structure in this
layer
A
The main toolbar contains all the major tools for navigating the structure, moving the structure and
changing your perspective.
Label Description
A Clicking on this button centers the molecule on the screen
Clicking on this button changes your cursor to the 'hand' which allows you to move the
B
entire molecule or selection
Clicking on this button changes your cursor to the zoom-in zoom-out cursor. Dragging your
C
mouse forward and back will zoom you into and out of the structure.
Clicking on this button changes your cursor to the rotate cursor. Moving your mouse side-to-
D
side and up and down will rotate the molecule or selection
Clicking on this changes the rotation from a global rotation or a rotation about the axis of
E symmetry of the molecule. Often this is useful to play with when you are trying to get a
particular angle and can't quite get the structure to move the way you would like.
F Toggles between moving the entire structure or just the selected residues.
Changing Colors
You can change the color of individual residues, ribbons, loops and strucures by selecting them
individually and in groups and then changing the color of the ribbon, sidechain, backbone etc. from the
Control Panel. You do this by selecting the down arrow under the 'col' option to change the item you
want to color and then use the small boxes next to the residue to change the color. There are other
options, however that give you important information and are easier to work with than selecting groups
within the control panel. These selections are found in the Color drop down menu in the Main Toolbar.
The box below describes the most useful features of this menu.
Label Information
Colors the
individual
atoms
A
according to a
standard color
scheme
Colors by the
type of amino
acid. Non-polar
B = grey, polar
=yellow, acidic
= red, basic
=blue.
Colors by
secondary
structural
element.
Helices are red,
sheets yellow
C and loops
white, by
default. You
may change
these colors in
the Preferences
menu.
D Colors by
secondary
structure
succession
from N to C
terminus. This
colors by
wavelength of
the visible
spectrum from
N terminus =
violet to C
terminus =red.
Exercise 1: Using the above tools to view meaningful aspects of serine protease
structure.
Click on Outline, Control Panel, Main Toolbar and Changing Colors to return to the appropriate
sections above. Click on the icons above to return to this section.
1. Create a ribbon
diagram of trypsin.
Color it by
secondary structure
and then by
secondary structure
succession.
2. Place labels on
the N-terminal and Check "labl" next to these residues in the Control Panel
C-terminal residues
3. Make the
heteroatom(s)
Use checkmarks in the 'show' and 'side' columns for these heteroatoms.
appear in ball and
stick representation
4. Rotate the
structure so that Save a copy of this view by selecting Save-->Image in the File menu. Name this file
you best see the Initials01 (Example my first file was LML01). This can then be imported into the Protein
inhibitor bound Structure Exercise document. You will then write a descriptive caption for this picture
within the active that describes what is shown, highlighted and the overall purpose of the figure.
site and zoom the
structure in/out to Note: On a PC early versions of this program saved files as .tga files. These must be
best view the active opened in a photo editing program and saved as a different filename. On a Mac, this
site, while still doesn't happen. The files are saved as a .pict file. If you want to rename the file you can
retaining the entire open it in Preview or other photo editing software and rename it as a .tiff, .jpg or .gif for
protein in the import into a word processing program.
frame.
5. Now show the
structure of trypsin
in space-fill Use the control panel to change how the structure is shown.
showing the van
der Waals surface.
6. Color the
Remember to color both the backbone and side chain.
residues by Type
7. Retain the
inhibitor in ball-
and-stick form so
that it can be seen
within the active
site. Note the
possible
interactions Save a copy of this view by selecting Save-->Image in the File menu. You will write a
between that caption for this as described in the Protein Structure Exercise document.
inhibitor and the
protein that can be
seen through
analysis of the
information
provided in this
view.
Step 4: More Viewing Tools: Slabs, Selecting Specific Residue, Calculating H-bonds
and Generating Ramachandran Plots
The goal of this portion of the tutorial is to get you used to some more advanced features in Deep
View. This will allow you to select specific residues and allow you to display only those residues, or to
color these differently or display them in a particular representation. You can also compute H-bonds to
see which amino acids are connected non-covalently. If you combine these selection, image
manipulation and computational tools with the skills you learned above you will be able to create
images that convey a lot of structural information.
Ramachandran Plots
In addition to providing a tool for viewing structures, Deep View also allows you to examine the
phi/psi angles of the residues in the protein. In the Window menu is an option to generate a
Ramachandran plot for the protein you are viewing. This is a useful tool to find residues that may be
strained out of normal, allowed conformations, or to assess the quality of the protein structure (if 90%
of the residues have phi/psi angles outside the allowed regions, you may have some doubts!). To do
this you do the following:
1. In the control panel select all residues you want to see on the Ramachandran plot.
Move the mouse over the symbols on the screen to show what residues are located in what area of the
plot. The residue numbe corresponding to those phi/psi angles will appear in the upper left corner of the
plot. This will allow you to investigate particular residues that fall within different areas of the plot.
Slab View
This option, located in the Display menu allows you to slice the protein and see successive cross
sections through the protein structure. When this option is checked, hold down the shift button on your
keyboard and move your mouse back and forth. This will 'slice' the protein into sections that you scroll
through with your mouse. In the preferences menu you can change the width of the 'slice' that you take
to allow finer and coarser views into the structure.
Turning on this feature computes the H-bond distances between amino acids that are close enough to
form H-bonds and have functional groups that can make these interactions. There are two things you
must do to show these interactions:
1. You must compute the H-bonds. You do this by choosing Tools-->Compute H bonds
To show only select H-bonds you can select particular residues in the Conrol Panel or using the
techniques shown below (blue table). After you do this then you:
2. You display the H-bonds in a selection by choosing Display-->Show only H bonds from selection.
There are several ways to select residues. In fact, there is a whole menu dedicated to the task of
selecting particular residues. That menu is described below.
This menu offers a variety of ways to
select residues. You can then decide to
color these a particular color, zoom in to
see these etc.