Martins, Sílvia A.Perez, Marta A. S.Moreira, Irina S.Sousa, Sérgio F.Ramos, M. J.Fernandes, P. A.2015-04-222015-04-222015-04-22201310.1021/ct4000372https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/113461Understanding protein-protein association and being able to determine the crucial residues responsible for their association (hot-spots) is a key issue with huge practical applications such as rational drug design and protein engineering. A variety of computational methods exist to detect hot-spots residues, but the development of a fast and accurate quantitative alanine scanning mutagenesis (ASM) continues to be crucial. Using four protein-protein complexes, we have compared a variation of the standard computational ASM protocol developed at our group, based on the Molecular Mechanics/Poisson- Boltzmann Surface Area (MM-PBSA) approach, against Thermodynamic Integration (TI), a well-known and accurate but computationally expensive method. To compare the efficiency and the accuracy of the two methods, we have calculated the protein-protein binding free energy differences upon alanine mutation of interfacial residues (ΔΔGbind). In relation to the experimental ΔΔGbind values, the average error obtained with TI was 1.53 kcal/mol, while the ASM protocol resulted in an average error of 1.18 kcal/mol. The results demonstrate that the much faster ASM protocol gives results at the same level of accuracy as the TI method but at a fraction of the computational time required to run TI. This ASM protocol is therefore a strong and efficient alternative to the systematic evaluation of protein-protein interfaces, involving hundreds of amino acid residues in search of hot-spots. © 2013 American Chemical Society.Computational Alanine Scanning Mutagenesis: MM-PBSA vs TItext::journal::journal article::research article