Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-1-2012
Published In
Journal Of Bioinformatics And Computational Biology
Abstract
Protein X-ray crystallography — the most popular method for determining protein structures — remains a laborious process requiring a great deal of manual crystallographer effort to interpret low-quality protein images. Automating this process is critical in creating a high-throughput protein-structure determination pipeline. Previously, our group developed ACMI, a probabilistic framework for producing protein-structure models from electron-density maps produced via X-ray crystallography. ACMI uses a Markov Random Field to model the three-dimensional (3D) location of each non-hydrogen atom in a protein. Calculating the best structure in this model is intractable, so ACMI uses approximate inference methods to estimate the optimal structure. While previous results have shown ACMI to be the state-of-the-art method on this task, its approximate inference algorithm remains computationally expensive and susceptible to errors. In this work, we develop Probabilistic Ensembles in ACMI (PEA), a framework for leveraging multiple, independent runs of approximate inference to produce estimates of protein structures. Our results show statistically significant improvements in the accuracy of inference resulting in more complete and accurate protein structures. In addition, PEA provides a general framework for advanced approximate inference methods in complex problem domains.
Recommended Citation
Ameet Soni and J. Shavlik.
(2012).
"Probabilistic Ensembles For Improved Inference In Protein-Structure Determination".
Journal Of Bioinformatics And Computational Biology.
Volume 10,
Issue 10.
16-16.
DOI: 10.1142/S0219720012400094
https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-comp-sci/14
Comments
This work is a preprint freely provided to PubMed Central courtesy of World Scientific Publishing and Imperial College Press.