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Fast and Anisotropic Flexibility-Rigidity Index (1412.2786v1)

Published 8 Dec 2014 in q-bio.BM

Abstract: The flexibility-rigidity index (FRI) is a newly proposed method for the construction of atomic rigidity functions. The FRI method analyzes protein rigidity and flexibility and is capable of predicting protein B-factors without resorting to matrix diagonalization. A fundamental assumption used in the FRI is that protein structures are uniquely determined by various internal and external interactions, while the protein functions, such as stability and flexibility, are solely determined by the structure. As such, one can predict protein flexibility without resorting to the protein interaction Hamiltonian. Consequently, bypassing the matrix diagonalization, the original FRI has a computational complexity of O(N2). This work introduces a fast FRI (fFRI) algorithm for the flexibility analysis of large macromolecules. The proposed fFRI further reduces the computational complexity to O(N). Additionally, we propose anisotropic FRI (aFRI) algorithms for the analysis of protein collective dynamics. The aFRI algorithms admit adaptive Hessian matrices, from a completely global 3N*3N matrix to completely local 3*3 matrices. However, these local 3*3 matrices have built in much non-local correlation. Furthermore, we compare the accuracy and efficiency of FRI with some {established} approaches to flexibility analysis, namely, normal mode analysis (NMA) and Gaussian network model (GNM). The accuracy of the FRI method is tested. The FRI, particularly the fFRI, is orders of magnitude more efficient and about 10% more accurate overall than some of the most popular methods in the field. The proposed fFRI is able to predict B-factors for alpha-carbons of the HIV virus capsid (313,236 residues) in less than 30 seconds on a single processor using only one core. Finally, we demonstrate the application of FRI and aFRI to protein domain analysis.

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