SDM: a server for predicting effects of mutations on protein stability

AP Pandurangan, B Ochoa-Montano… - Nucleic acids …, 2017 - academic.oup.com
Nucleic acids research, 2017academic.oup.com
Here, we report a webserver for the improved SDM, used for predicting the effects of
mutations on protein stability. As a pioneering knowledge-based approach, SDM has been
highlighted as the most appropriate method to use in combination with many other
approaches. We have updated the environment-specific amino-acid substitution tables
based on the current expanded PDB (a 5-fold increase in information), and introduced new
residue-conformation and interaction parameters, including packing density and residue …
Abstract
Here, we report a webserver for the improved SDM, used for predicting the effects of mutations on protein stability. As a pioneering knowledge-based approach, SDM has been highlighted as the most appropriate method to use in combination with many other approaches. We have updated the environment-specific amino-acid substitution tables based on the current expanded PDB (a 5-fold increase in information), and introduced new residue-conformation and interaction parameters, including packing density and residue depth. The updated server has been extensively tested using a benchmark containing 2690 point mutations from 132 different protein structures. The revised method correlates well against the hypothetical reverse mutations, better than comparable methods built using machine-learning approaches, highlighting the strength of our knowledge-based approach for identifying stabilising mutations. Given a PDB file (a Protein Data Bank file format containing the 3D coordinates of the protein atoms), and a point mutation, the server calculates the stability difference score between the wildtype and mutant protein. The server is available at http://structure.bioc.cam.ac.uk/sdm2
Oxford University Press