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Rosetta FlexPepDock to predict peptide-MHC binding: An approach for non-canonical amino acids.

Authors :
Nathaniel Bloodworth
Natália Ruggeri Barbaro
Rocco Moretti
David G Harrison
Jens Meiler
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 17, Iss 12, p e0275759 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2022.

Abstract

Computation methods that predict the binding of peptides to MHC-I are important tools for screening and identifying immunogenic antigens and have the potential to accelerate vaccine and drug development. However, most available tools are sequence-based and optimized only for peptides containing the twenty canonical amino acids. This omits a large number of peptides containing non-canonical amino acids (NCAA), or residues that undergo varied post-translational modifications such as glycosylation or phosphorylation. These modifications fundamentally alter peptide immunogenicity. Similarly, existing structure-based methods are biased towards canonical peptide backbone structures, which may or may not be preserved when NCAAs are present. Rosetta FlexPepDock ab-initio is a structure-based computational protocol able to evaluate peptide-receptor interaction where no prior information of the peptide backbone is known. We benchmarked FlexPepDock ab-initio for docking canonical peptides to MHC-I, and illustrate for the first time the method's ability to accurately model MHC-I bound epitopes containing NCAAs. FlexPepDock ab-initio protocol was able to recapitulate near-native structures (≤1.5Å) in the top lowest-energy models for 20 out of 25 cases in our initial benchmark. Using known experimental binding affinities of twenty peptides derived from an influenza-derived peptide, we showed that FlexPepDock protocol is able to predict relative binding affinity as Rosetta energies correlate well with experimental values (r = 0.59, p = 0.006). ROC analysis revealed 80% true positive and a 40% false positive rate, with a prediction power of 93%. Finally, we demonstrate the protocol's ability to accurately recapitulate HLA-A*02:01 bound phosphopeptide backbone structures and relative binding affinity changes, the theoretical structure of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis derived glycosylated peptide GP392 bound to MHC-I H-2Db, and isolevuglandin-adducted peptides. The ability to use non-canonical amino acids in the Rosetta FlexPepDock protocol may provide useful insight into critical amino acid positions where the post-translational modification modulates immunologic responses.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
17
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8c8eb2b8a4644965992c96527112c437
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0275759&type=printable