This proposal will fund the training of post-doctoral researcher Jeffrey J. Gray in the laboratory of Professor David Baker in the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Washington. Gray will be a Ph.D. chemical engineer in August of 2000, and he is an expert in scientific computation and colloid science including self-assembly processes and electrostatics. The goal of the training period is to make Gray an expert in genomics and protein biophysics. Gray's ultimate career goal is to lead an independent research group which will conduct fundamental research at the interface of biology and engineering. In addition to genomics and protein interests, Gray's long-term research interests include biomaterials, drug design, and nanotechnology. Gray's training will consist of courses, lab work in David Baker and Stan Fields' laboratories, and a research project in functional protein genomics. Baker's laboratory is one of the leaders in protein characterization, structure determination, and computational structure prediction. Stan Fields is one of the leaders in experimental protein genomics, having pioneered the two-hybrid technique. The goal of the research project is to develop a tool to predict the structure of protein-protein complexes given structures of the isolated proteins. This tool will be useful for rapid and inexpensive genomic level studies of protein interactions. In the long term, this will be useful in mapping genetic data to molecular level function. In addition, the work will necessarily improve understanding of molecular potentials, solvation phenomena, and macromolecular thermodynamics. . Besides these fundamental scientific issues, the knowledge of protein-protein interactions developed may have significant impact for protein-related diseases and drug design. The project will draw from Gray's expertise in electrostatics, and protein electrostatics will be modeled using the efficient and accurate generalized Born model. For tool validation, Gray will first search for correct docked structures starting with perturbed bound structures or individual protein structures in their docked configurations. Subsequently, the tool will be generalized to include side-chain and main chain flexibility to be able to model docking beginning with undocked protein structures. Finally, genomic level analyses will be made to compliment experimental two-hybrid studies of protein-protein interactions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Type
Research Scientist Development Award - Research & Training (K01)
Project #
3K01HG002316-03S1
Application #
6784899
Study Section
Ethical, Legal, Social Implications Review Committee (GNOM)
Program Officer
Felsenfeld, Adam
Project Start
2001-06-22
Project End
2006-08-31
Budget Start
2003-08-29
Budget End
2003-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$52,369
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Engineering (All Types)
Type
Schools of Engineering
DUNS #
001910777
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Lensink, Marc F; Moal, Iain H; Bates, Paul A et al. (2014) Blind prediction of interfacial water positions in CAPRI. Proteins 82:620-32
Daily, Michael D; Upadhyaya, Tarak J; Gray, Jeffrey J (2008) Contact rearrangements form coupled networks from local motions in allosteric proteins. Proteins 71:455-66
Sivasubramanian, Arvind; Maynard, Jennifer A; Gray, Jeffrey J (2008) Modeling the structure of mAb 14B7 bound to the anthrax protective antigen. Proteins 70:218-30
Daily, Michael D; Gray, Jeffrey J (2007) Local motions in a benchmark of allosteric proteins. Proteins 67:385-99
Sivasubramanian, Arvind; Chao, Ginger; Pressler, Heather M et al. (2006) Structural model of the mAb 806-EGFR complex using computational docking followed by computational and experimental mutagenesis. Structure 14:401-14
Gray, Jeffrey J (2006) High-resolution protein-protein docking. Curr Opin Struct Biol 16:183-93
Daily, Michael D; Masica, David; Sivasubramanian, Arvind et al. (2005) CAPRI rounds 3-5 reveal promising successes and future challenges for RosettaDock. Proteins 60:181-6
Gray, Jeffrey J; Moughon, Stewart; Wang, Chu et al. (2003) Protein-protein docking with simultaneous optimization of rigid-body displacement and side-chain conformations. J Mol Biol 331:281-99