Publication | Open Access
FoXS, FoXSDock and MultiFoXS: Single-state and multi-state structural modeling of proteins and their complexes based on SAXS profiles
545
Citations
28
References
2016
Year
Structural BioinformaticsBiomolecular Structure PredictionMolecular BiologyMulti-state Structural ModelingSaxs ProfilesProtein FoldingMulti-protein AssemblyBiophysicsBiochemistryProtein ModelingProtein Structure PredictionProtein BioinformaticsStructural BiologyNatural SciencesSaxs ExperimentComputational BiologySystems BiologyMedicineSaxs Profile
Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS) is an increasingly common and useful technique for structural characterization of molecules in solution. A SAXS experiment determines the scattering intensity of a molecule as a function of spatial frequency, termed SAXS profile. Here, we describe three web servers for modeling atomic structures based on SAXS profiles. FoXS (Fast X-Ray Scattering) rapidly computes a SAXS profile of a given atomistic model and fits it to an experimental profile. FoXSDock docks two rigid protein structures based on a SAXS profile of their complex. MultiFoXS computes a population-weighted ensemble starting from a single input structure by fitting to a SAXS profile of the protein in solution. We describe the interfaces and capabilities of the servers (salilab.org/foxs), followed by demonstrating their application on Interleukin-33 (IL-33) and its primary receptor ST2.
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