research papers\(\def\hfill{\hskip 5em}\def\hfil{\hskip 3em}\def\eqno#1{\hfil {#1}}\)

IUCrJ
Volume 2| Part 2| March 2015| Pages 207-217
ISSN: 2052-2525

Advanced ensemble modelling of flexible macromolecules using X-ray solution scattering

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aEuropean Molecular Biology Laboratory, Hamburg Outstation, c/o DESY, Notkestrasse 85, Hamburg, 22603, Germany
*Correspondence e-mail: giancarlo.tria@embl-hamburg.de, svergun@embl-hamburg.de

Edited by A. Fitch, ESRF, France (Received 27 October 2014; accepted 30 January 2015; online 26 February 2015)

Dynamic ensembles of macromolecules mediate essential processes in biology. Understanding the mechanisms driving the function and molecular interactions of `unstructured' and flexible molecules requires alternative approaches to those traditionally employed in structural biology. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is an established method for structural characterization of biological macromolecules in solution, and is directly applicable to the study of flexible systems such as intrinsically disordered proteins and multi-domain proteins with unstructured regions. The Ensemble Optimization Method (EOM) [Bernadó et al. (2007[Bernadó, P., Mylonas, E., Petoukhov, M. V., Blackledge, M. & Svergun, D. I. (2007). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 5656-5664.]). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 5656–5664] was the first approach introducing the concept of ensemble fitting of the SAXS data from flexible systems. In this approach, a large pool of macromolecules covering the available conformational space is generated and a sub-ensemble of conformers coexisting in solution is selected guided by the fit to the experimental SAXS data. This paper presents a series of new developments and advancements to the method, including significantly enhanced functionality and also quantitative metrics for the characterization of the results. Building on the original concept of ensemble optimization, the algorithms for pool generation have been redesigned to allow for the construction of partially or completely symmetric oligomeric models, and the selection procedure was improved to refine the size of the ensemble. Quantitative measures of the flexibility of the system studied, based on the characteristic integral parameters of the selected ensemble, are introduced. These improvements are implemented in the new EOM version 2.0, and the capabilities as well as inherent limitations of the ensemble approach in SAXS, and of EOM 2.0 in particular, are discussed.

1. Introduction

Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) of particles in solution is a widely used technique for the structural characterization of biological macromolecules (Svergun et al., 2013[Svergun, D. I., Koch, M. H. J., Timmins, P. A. & May, R. P. (2013). Small-Angle X-ray and Neutron Scattering from Solutions of Biological Macromolecules. USA: Oxford University Press.]; Feigin & Svergun, 1987[Feigin, L. A. & Svergun, D. I. (1987). Structure Analysis by Small-Angle X-Ray and Neutron Scattering. New York: Plenum Press.]). Perhaps one of the most exciting applications of the technique is in the field of unstructural biology (Tompa, 2011[Tompa, P. (2011). Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 21, 419-425.]), where SAXS is increasingly employed to extract information from extremely challenging systems including flexible multi-domain proteins with disordered inter-domain linkers and intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs). Flexible particles are difficult objects to study and often little is known about their structural organization or lack thereof. It is increasingly recognized that structural disorder appears to be a common feature of functional macromolecules with approximately 40% of proteins in the human genome presenting at least one disordered region (≥ 30 residues) and 25% likely to be completely disordered (Chouard, 2011[Chouard, T. (2011). Nature, 471, 151-153.]), obviating to some extent the traditional dogma of structural biology: function requires structure. An increasing number of studies demonstrate that the absence of a stable predefined shape does not prevent biomolecules such as proteins from performing important biological functions (Rubio-Cosials et al., 2011[Rubio-Cosials, A., Sidow, J. F., Jiménez-Menéndez, N., Fernández-Millán, P., Montoya, J., Jacobs, H. T., Collect, M., Bernadó, P. & Solà, M. (2011). Nature Struct. Mol. Biol. 18, 1281-1289.]; Devarakonda et al., 2011[Devarakonda, S., Gupta, K., Chalmers, M. J., Hunt, J. F., Griffin, P. R., Van Duyne, G. D. & Spiegelman, B. M. (2011). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 108, 18678-18683.]; Pérard et al., 2013[Pérard, J., Leyrat, C., Baudin, F., Drouet, E. & Jamin, M. (2013). Nature Commun. 4, 1612.]; Uversky et al., 2008[Uversky, V. N., Oldfield, C. J. & Dunker, A. K. (2008). Annu. Rev. Biophys. 37, 215-246.]). Instead, structural plasticity is often essential for the execution of specific roles, in particular for proteins that perform both multiple and single tasks. Consequently the concept of disorder has been revisited and associated with a macromolecule's complexity; however, the standard high-resolution approaches of structural biology are limited in their ability to characterize disordered systems. Crystallization of flexible systems for macromolecular X-ray crystallography (MX) is challenging, and the inherent size limitations (∼60 kDa) of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) hinder applicability. Furthermore, when applied to flexible particles electron microscopy (EM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) often yield complex and ambiguous results. Without the requirement for crystals and without effective size limitations, SAXS in near-native solutions is becoming more and more popular for the characterization of such systems.

Qualitative and quantitative scattering studies can be conducted on disordered systems, with flexible particles represented as collections of spheres (Calmettes et al., 1993[Calmettes, P., Roux, B., Durand, D., Desmandril, M. & Smith, J. C. (1993). J. Mol. Biol. 231, 840-848.]) or more commonly using an ensemble of molecular conformations (Ozenne et al., 2012[Ozenne, V., Bauer, F., Salmon, L., Huang, J., Jensen, M. R., Segard, S., Bernadó, P., Charavay, C. & Blackledge, M. (2012). Bioinformatics, 11, 1463-1470.]). Ensemble representations of such supertertiary structure (Tompa, 2012[Tompa, P. (2012). Nature Chem. Biol. 8, 597-600.]) were initially developed for NMR studies (Bernadó et al., 2005[Bernadó, P., Blanchard, L., Timmins, P., Marion, D., Ruigrok, R. W. H. & Blackledge, M. (2005). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 102, 17002-17007.]), but were quickly extended to other techniques in structural biology including solution scattering. The Ensemble Optimization Method (EOM) (Bernadó et al., 2007[Bernadó, P., Mylonas, E., Petoukhov, M. V., Blackledge, M. & Svergun, D. I. (2007). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 5656-5664.]) was the first ensemble-based fitting strategy proposed to address the structural characterization of IDPs by SAXS, and a number of other implementations of this approach have followed e.g. MES (Pelikan et al., 2009[Pelikan, M., Hura, G. L. & Hammel, M. (2009). Gen. Physiol. Biophys. 28, 174-189.]), BSS-SAXS (Yang et al., 2010[Yang, S. C., Blachowicz, L., Makowski, L. & Roux, B. (2010). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 107, 15757-15762.]), EROS (Różycki et al., 2011[Różycki, B., Kim, Y. C. & Hummer, G. (2011). Structure, 19, 109-116.]), ENSEMBLE (Krzeminski et al., 2013[Krzeminski, M., Marsh, J. A., Neale, C., Choy, W. Y. & Forman-Kay, J. D. (2013). Bioinformatics, 29, 398-399.]). These SAXS-driven ensemble modelling programs have enabled effective characterization of a number of IDPs and modular single-chain proteins that was not possible by MX, NMR and microscopy alone. This success is now pushing development of the method for even more challenging studies in unstructural biology. These include complexes of protein and nucleic acids, mixtures of oligomeric states and assemblies, specification of surface contacts and interfaces, and symmetry operations. This work presents an enhanced version, EOM 2.0, introducing new developments that aim to expand the utility of the approach for solution scattering studies. Some limitations of the original implementation are addressed, and case studies where the prototypal version of EOM 2.0 has been successfully employed are discussed. Further, we analyse the capacity of the ensemble approach in SAXS to resolve distinct conformational states and also provide quantitative metrics for characterizing the results provided by the ensemble fitting.

2. The ensemble concept in SAXS

When a solution of non-interacting chemically identical particles is illuminated in a SAXS experiment, the recorded scattering pattern I(s) is a sum of that produced by each particle averaged over all orientations, where I is the scattered intensity and s refers to the magnitude of the scattering vector defined as s = [4\pi\sin(\theta)/\lambda] (where 2θ is the scattering angle and λ is the wavelength of the incident X-rays). For a system of flexible macromolecules, each conformation of each particle will contribute on the timescale of the SAXS measurement (typically, from sub-seconds to minutes). As the particles in a dilute system scatter independently, the time average due to changing conformation of a single particle is equivalent to the average over the entire ensemble. As a result, I(s) represents the sum of the average scattering intensities of all conformations present in the conformationally polydisperse solution (Svergun et al., 2013[Svergun, D. I., Koch, M. H. J., Timmins, P. A. & May, R. P. (2013). Small-Angle X-ray and Neutron Scattering from Solutions of Biological Macromolecules. USA: Oxford University Press.]). Thus the scattering data themselves will encode the degree of structural order/disorder. Qualitative assessment of structural disorder versus compactness of e.g. proteins can often be achieved by a transformation of the experimental data to a Kratky representation [s2 I(s) versus s] (Glatter & Kratky, 1982[Glatter, O. & Kratky, O. (1982). Small-Angle X-ray Scattering. London: Academic Press.]), or using a dimensionless plot (sRg)2 I(s)/I(0) versus sRg, where Rg is the radius of gyration (Durand et al., 2010[Durand, D., Vivès, C., Cannella, D., Pérez, J., Pebay-Peyroula, E., Vachette, P. & Fieschi, F. (2010). J. Struct. Biol. 169, 45-53.]). In these simple but informative plots globular macromolecules follow asymptotic behaviour at high scattering angles and display a bell-shaped peak with a well defined maximum at low angles. For disordered protein chains and polymers the peak at low angles is absent and an increase in intensity to a plateau followed by a monotonic increase at higher angles is observed [see reviews for details (Receveur-Brechot & Durand, 2012[Receveur-Brechot, V. & Durand, D. (2012). Curr. Protein Pept. Sci. 13, 55-75.]; Bernadó & Svergun, 2012[Bernadó, P. & Svergun, D. I. (2012). Methods Mol. Biol. 896, 107-122.]). A distinct lack of features in the real-space distance-distribution function, P(r), computed by a Fourier transformation of I(s) (Bernadó, 2010[Bernadó, P. (2010). Eur. Biophys. J. 39, 769-780.]) as well as the absence of a plateau in a Porod–Debye representation [s4 I(s) versus s4] (Rambo & Tainer, 2011[Rambo, R. P. & Tainer, J. A. (2011). Biopolymers, 95, 559-571.]) may also indicate disorder/flexibility. Additionally, failure to generate a satisfactory single model during rigid-body refinement against the experimental scattering data from a potentially flexible system may additionally suggest conformational polydispersity (Petoukhov et al., 2012[Petoukhov, M. V., Franke, D., Shkumatov, A. V., Tria, G., Kikhney, A. G., Gajda, M., Gorba, C., Mertens, H. D. T., Konarev, P. V. & Svergun, D. I. (2012). J. Appl. Cryst. 45, 342-350.]). In such cases an ensemble approach to modelling is likely to be more appropriate and may yield greater insight into the biology of the system. In such cases, an ensemble of conformationally polydisperse particles is approximated as a mixture according to equation (1)[link]:

[I(s) = \textstyle\sum\limits_k {{v_k}{I_k}(s)} \eqno (1)]

where Ik(s) is the scattering intensity from the kth component and vk the volume fraction for that component (Konarev et al., 2006[Konarev, P. V., Petoukhov, M. V., Volkov, V. V. & Svergun, D. I. (2006). J. Appl. Cryst. 39, 277-286.]). For flexible systems, the deconvolution of the scattering pattern into those from single components is clearly impossible given the very large number of conformers and an indirect approach is required. The strategy on which EOM is based consists of three main steps: (i) generate a large pool of possible conformations in order to approximate the (otherwise infinite) conformational space; (ii) compute the scattering profile for each conformation; (iii) select a subset of conformations that minimizes the discrepancy χ2 [equation (2)[link]]:

[{\chi ^2} = {1 \over {K - 1}}{\sum\limits_{j = 1}^K {\left [{{{\mu I(s_j) - I\exp (s_j)} \over {\sigma (s_j)}}} \right]} ^2} \eqno (2)]

where Iexp(s) is the experimental scattering, K is the number of experimental points, σ(sj) are standard deviations and μ is a scaling factor (Bernadó et al., 2007[Bernadó, P., Mylonas, E., Petoukhov, M. V., Blackledge, M. & Svergun, D. I. (2007). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 5656-5664.]).

EOM employs a genetic algorithm (GA) to select subsets of conformations from the random pool that best fit the experimental data. This selected ensemble then represents a low-resolution sample space which is used to generate distributions of structural parameters, and it is these distributions of parameters and not the ensemble members themselves that form the basis of the analysis. Results are then reported for the selected solutions as distributions of the parameters Rg and the maximum particle dimension (Dmax). These parameters are pre-calculated in real space from all conformers at the stage of pool generation. The distributions are then compared with those derived from the initial pool, representing the unrestricted conformational freedom of the system, in order to visually delineate overall properties of biomolecules such as compactness and flexibility (Bernadó et al., 2007[Bernadó, P., Mylonas, E., Petoukhov, M. V., Blackledge, M. & Svergun, D. I. (2007). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 5656-5664.]).

The widespread use of the original implementation of the EOM software and the subsequent adaptation of ensemble approaches in biological scattering studies demonstrate the usefulness of the method. However, the studies conducted have highlighted a number of limitations of SAXS-driven ensemble fitting and its applicability that necessitate further development for the extension of the method to more complicated cases. Also to be addressed is the often non-trivial interpretation of the results by visual comparison of the Rg and Dmax distributions. An unambiguous approach based on widely shared metrics must also be introduced to enhance the fidelity of the ensemble method. These concerns are addressed in the following sections.

3. Advanced EOM 2.0: enhanced ensemble generation, selection and optimization

The successful use of an ensemble approach to describe a solution of biomacromolecules rests on the following: (i) realistic and adequate sampling of conformational space during pool generation; (ii) the employment of an appropriate search technique (usually Monte Carlo-based) for the selection of an ensemble that optimally describes the experimental data; (iii) the presentation of results in a clear, straightforward and, whenever possible, quantitative way. The pool generation task must produce feasible models (e.g. avoiding steric clashes and maintaining chain connectivity) that cover the possible conformational space and, if available, incorporate high-resolution information from complementary techniques, e.g. MX and NMR. The search procedure should also be able to optimize the number of conformations in the ensemble. It should be noted here that the best strategy may not necessarily lie in the minimal number of conformations that can describe the experimental data (this principle is hardly applicable to very flexible systems like IDPs). Instead, a possibility should be provided to adjust the number of conformers in the search for the optimized ensemble contributing to the final scattering. These considerations form the basis for the developments discussed below.

3.1. Intelligent generation of missing fragments

SAXS is commonly employed to account for mobile regions absent from high-resolution structures. Often these regions are disordered and must be modelled taking into account particular features of unstructured and/or flexible macromolecules (e.g. dihedral angles). For the ensemble generation as applied to proteins, a heuristic algorithm for intelligent browsing of the bond versus dihedral angle distribution represented by the Cα–Cα Ramachandran plot (Kleywegt, 1997[Kleywegt, G. J. (1997). J. Mol. Biol. 273, 371-376.]) (Fig. S1 in the supporting information) has been implemented. This approach allows missing regions or `linkers' to be feasibly modelled without size limitations, using a random or native sequence designation for the generation of `fully disordered' and `less disordered' regions, respectively. Both modes generate the chains following Flory's relationship [equation (3)[link]] (Flory, 1953[Flory, P. (1953). Principles of Polymer Chemistry. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.]):

[R_{\rm g} = {R_0}{N^v} \eqno (3)]

where N is the number of monomeric units in a polymer chain, R0 is a constant that depends on the persistence length of the polymer and v is an exponential scaling factor [for IDPs, R0 = 1.927±0.27 and v = 0.598±0.028 (Kohn et al., 2004[Kohn, J. E., Millett, I. S., Jacob, J., Zagrovic, B., Dillon, T. M., Cingel, N., Dothager, R. S., Seifert, S., Thiyagarajan, P., Sosnick, T. R., Hasan, M. Z., Pande, V. S., Ruczinski, I., Doniach, S. & Plaxco, K. W. (2004). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 101, 12491-12496.]), and for chemically denatured proteins R0 = 2.54±0.01 and v = 0.522±0.01 (Bernadó & Svergun, 2012[Bernadó, P. & Svergun, D. I. (2012). Methods Mol. Biol. 896, 107-122.]). The impact/robustness of the introduction of this feature is discussed below.

3.2. Oligomer generation and symmetry operations

In the original EOM implementation, tools for oligomer generation and for the definition of specific interfaces and inter-domain/subunit contacts were not available. To overcome this shortcoming, the ability to fix all the subunits in defined positions and orientations is now introduced, significantly reducing the probability of obtaining nonsensical conformations and allowing for the generation of specific structural assemblies (Fig. 1[link]).

[Figure 1]
Figure 1
(i) Different views of an example multi-domain protein composed of two domains [solved by MX: (a) grey and (b) yellow], connected by a disordered linker 30 amino acids long (transparent red spheres, left area). (ii) Multiple inter-domain linker reconstructions (multiple colours) computed with EOM (upper-right area). (iii) Different views of multiple inter-domain linker reconstructions computed with EOM 2.0 using the new possibility to fix domain positions in three-dimensional coordinates (bottom-right area).

Oligomeric assemblies with flexible regions are an important class of biological macromolecules, and their study adds an extra level of complexity to the ensemble-based modelling. Disordered regions in a multi-domain protein may retain the symmetry observed for the high-resolution core, and the generation of symmetric configurations of the full-length protein based on this core can help to significantly restrict, as well as better describe, the conformational space from which the search algorithm samples (Fig. 2[link]a). As symmetry may not necessarily be preserved beyond the core structure, it is also important that modelling asymmetric flexible sections is possible (Fig. 2[link]b). The options to import a high-resolution oligomeric core structure and the generation of user-defined interfaces have been introduced into EOM 2.0, with the latter option using a contact distance restraint between specified sequence positions. In cases where a definite oligomeric core structure is not available, complementary biophysical techniques and tools, e.g. PISA (Krissinel & Henrick, 2007[Krissinel, E. & Henrick, K. (2007). J. Mol. Biol. 372, 774-797.]), can be used to detect potential interfaces. Non-crystallographic symmetry (i.e. symmetry P7, P9, P11 etc.) can also be applied. The current implementation provides interface definitions and symmetry operations, allowing for the modelling of complex inter-particle interactions (e.g. protein–protein or protein–nucleic acids), while still broadly sampling the available conformational space and generating configurations free of steric clashes.

[Figure 2]
Figure 2
Different views of a hexameric multi-domain protein with a symmetric oligomeric core. Each monomer is composed of two domains connected by a flexible linker and with disordered N- and C-termini. (a) Generated full-length hexamer where P6 symmetry is applied to the core and to the disordered regions. (b) Asymmetric modelling where the generated chains are independent of each other and the symmetry is present in the core only.

3.3. Optimization of the ensemble size

In the original EOM it was assumed that each member of the selected ensemble contributes equally to the overall scattering intensity, with the ensemble size predefined (by default, 20 conformations). In the present version, the ensemble size may be optimized during the minimization procedure together with the selection of the conformers. The search procedure randomly selects ensembles within a customizable range of sizes, uniformly distributed. The ensemble that best minimizes the discrepancy χ2 is selected and its size represents the refined number of conformations, each with individual weights (fractions of occupancy). Accordingly, more flexible proteins are described by more populate ensembles (typically between ten and 20; up to a maximum of 50 conformers are allowed) whereas the scattering from more rigid molecules can still be fitted by a small number of conformations (between two and five but theoretically down to one, if there is a single conformer that provides an excellent fit). In other ensemble fitting approaches, weighting of particular conformers has been adopted, although implemented differently, and a minimal set of several dominant conformations was searched to describe the scattering data (Pelikan et al., 2009[Pelikan, M., Hura, G. L. & Hammel, M. (2009). Gen. Physiol. Biophys. 28, 174-189.]; Yang et al., 2010[Yang, S. C., Blachowicz, L., Makowski, L. & Roux, B. (2010). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 107, 15757-15762.]). Looking for a minimum set may provide good results for macromolecular systems adopting a few defined conformations, but this is not likely to be an optimum strategy for very flexible systems, such as IDPs, which adopt an astronomic number of configurations in solution.

3.4. Ensemble fitting with multiple pools

SAXS-driven ensemble fitting can also be applied to the study of mixtures, including oligomeric equilibria and solutions of multiple distinct particle species. In such cases, when complementary methods provide additional information on the components and/or assemblies present, multiple pools can be generated for each species (e.g. monomer, dimer, tetramer). These pools can be obtained externally or generated by EOM 2.0, and compose an expanded search space. If warranted (e.g. based on analytical ultracentrifugation data), the percentage of models selected from each pool may be defined prior to optimization. Care must be taken with the interpretation of such an analysis as the systems containing multiple species are yet less determined compared to those with only conformational polydispersity. Supporting information from other sources is often required to draw meaningful conclusions from the analysis of multiple pools (see §5[link]).

3.5. Measures of flexibility, Rflex and Rσ

The major result of EOM analysis are the distributions of low-resolution structural parameters (Rg and Dmax), which describe the flexibility of the system. These distributions are obtained by averaging multiple runs of the GA (Bernadó et al., 2007[Bernadó, P., Mylonas, E., Petoukhov, M. V., Blackledge, M. & Svergun, D. I. (2007). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 5656-5664.]) and encode information about the states assumed by the particles in solution. They can be described as probability density functions S = (X,P), where P = ([p_1,\ldots,p_n]) is the probability ascribed to the interval X = {[x_1,\ldots,x_n]} such that

[\textstyle\sum\limits_{i = 1}^n {p\left({{x_i}} \right) = 1}. \eqno (4)]

The characteristics of the selected ensemble are compared to those displayed by the pool allowing one to assess the flexibility of the system. Previously, decoding of this information was left to the visual perception of the user leaving room for potential misinterpretations; here we introduce a quantitative measure utilizing the concept of information entropy.

The entropy Hb(S) (Shannon & Weaver, 1949[Shannon, C. E. & Weaver, W. (1949). The Mathematical Theory of Communication. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press.])

[\eqalignno {& {H_b}(S) = - \textstyle\sum\limits_{i = 1}^n {p({x_i}){{\log }_b}[p({x_i})]} &\cr &{\rm with} \,\, {\log _b}[p({x_i})] = 0 \,\, {\rm if}\,\, p({x_i}) = 0& (5)\cr}]

can be conveniently applied to enable a quantitative characterization of EOM size distributions (see the supporting information for further details). Indeed, a protein showing a broad Gaussian-like distribution of parameters, where it is assumed the disordered regions move randomly in solution, can be viewed as a carrier of high uncertainty. Here, Hb(S) tends to −1, which is expected to be close to the Hb(S) calculated for the pool. Conversely, a protein with a narrow size distribution (a scenario where the particle exhibits limited flexibility) provides low uncertainty, with Hb(S) tending to 0. Consequently, the distributions, i.e. uniform [Hb(S) = −1] and single value [Hb(S) = 0], are then considered as representations of extreme, albeit theoretical, cases of maximal flexibility and complete rigidity, respectively. The information content, or entropy, can therefore be used as a quantitative measure of flexibility (Figs. 3[link]a, 3[link]b) with a metric we define as Rflex[\in] [0,1]:

[{R_{\rm flex}} = - {H_b}(S). \eqno (6)]

Using Rflex, the selected ensemble distribution can be numerically compared to that of the pool, the latter representing a reference for flexibility. For convenience, Rflex can be reported as a percentage in the range 0 to 100%, with Rflex = 100% indicating maximum flexibility. This convention will be followed here.

[Figure 3]
Figure 3
Qualitative characterization of particle flexibility from various characteristic Rg distributions. (a) Pool (black), which represents the case of complete randomness; EOM(1) (purple), EOM(2) (orange), EOM(3) (pink) and EOM(4) (dark green) which represent the real outcome of independent EOM 2.0 runs in terms of Rg distributions; uniform (cyan), compact (light blue), bimodal (red) which represent extreme (theoretical) cases. (b) Hb(S) values computed from the distributions in (a). (c) Combination of Rflex values for all the distributions (and compared to the threshold of randomness computed from the pool, in brackets, ∼89%) with the associated Rσ values. The last example (red curve) indicates a potentially inconsistent result.

The Rflex metric allows one to quantify the difference between flexible and rigid systems; it is especially useful in conjunction with the additional metric Rσ:

[{R_\sigma } = {{{\sigma _{\rm S}}} \over {{\sigma _{\rm P}}}} \eqno (7)]

where σS and σP are the standard deviations for the distributions of the selected ensemble and of the pool, respectively. Rσ indicates the variance of the ensemble distribution with respect to the original pool, yielding values close to 1.0 when the ensemble distribution describes a fully flexible system and largely reproduces the conformational space of the pool. Therefore, in cases where Rflex is smaller than that of the pool distribution, Rσ should be below unity. Conversely, when Rflex tends to values greater than that of the random pool, Rσ > 1.0. For the cases where Rflex is significantly smaller than that of the random distribution but Rσ > 1, further investigation is required as this combination may point towards poor data quality. The above-mentioned cases (Fig. 3[link]a) are therefore compared in Fig. 3[link](c) where conclusions regarding ensemble flexibility based on the Rflex and Rσ metrics are reported, allowing also an automated check for discovering potential artifacts e.g. due to poor data quality or aggregation. In addition to Rflex and Rσ, distributions are also compared using a set of standard descriptors: standard deviation, average absolute deviation, kurtosis, skewness and geometric average (see the supporting information).

4. Applications of EOM 2.0: tests and case studies

The major prerequisites for successful application of the SAXS-driven ensemble-based modelling are: (i) the initial search pool is populated with models that describe well the available conformational space, and (ii) that a robust ensemble selection is driven appropriately by the experimental data. The following tests and case studies demonstrate that the new implementation of EOM does successfully meet these conditions.

4.1. Adequate sampling of the conformational space of unfolded proteins

The population of end-to-end distances of unfolded proteins is expected to follow that of a Gaussian distribution, with a mean squared end-to-end distance equal to 70(± 15) Å2 × N, where N is the number of amino acids in the polypeptide chain (Fitzkee & Rose, 2004[Fitzkee, N. C. & Rose, G. D. (2004). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 101, 12497-12502.]). It is thus important to ensure that the members of a search pool generated for unfolded proteins conform to this behaviour.

In the first test of EOM 2.0 for unfolded proteins, pools of 10 000 polyalanine models of sequence length 100 or 500 amino acids were generated in random mode. This process was repeated five times for each sequence length and the end-to-end distances for individual models were calculated using the statistical package R (R Core Team, 2014[R Core Team (2014). R: a Language and Environment for Statistical Computing, https://www.R-project.org . Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing.]). Histogram plots of each pool were then generated and compared to the theoretical Gaussian distributions calculated using the same mean and standard deviation values as extracted from the pool (Fig. 4[link]). In both cases the resulting distributions well approximate the theoretical Gaussian with averaged RMSDs (between densities of normal and pool distributions) of 1.6 × 10−4 (N = 100) and 1.2 × 10−4 (N = 500), respectively. The mean squared end-to-end distances were 5591 Å2 (∼56 × N, N = 100) and 33 057 Å2 (∼66 × N, N = 500) for smaller and larger chains, respectively, in agreement with the experimental data for unfolded proteins (Tanford et al., 1966[Tanford, C., Kawahara, K. & Lapanje, S. (1966). J. Biol. Chem. 241, 1921-1923.]). This result indicates that a pool of 10 000 conformations is sufficient to approximate the conformational space of unfolded proteins.

[Figure 4]
Figure 4
Distribution of end-to-end distances computed from pools containing 10 000 structures of 100 and 500 amino-acid chains and compared with the expected normal distribution having the same mean and standard deviation values.

4.2. Evaluation of amino-acid number-to-Rg ratio

The radius of gyration, Rg, is one of the most important parameters for the analysis of macromolecules by SAXS. In EOM 2.0, generation of disordered regions is based on an intelligent usage of the native or random dihedral angle modes derived from the Cα–Cα Ramachandran plot. The capability of the method to generate feasible models that satisfy the theoretical Rg values described in §3.1[link] for IDPs and chemically denatured proteins was therefore tested for both native and random modes.

According to Flory's equation [equation (3)[link]] the Rg of a peptide chain is power-law dependent on the number of amino acids. To investigate the concordance of EOM 2.0 with this expectation, multiple pools (15) of 10 000 conformers of polyalanine were constructed in random as well as native modes. This was repeated for sequences of varying length (10, 20, 50, 100, 200 amino acids) and the average Rg was calculated. Fig. S3 shows the agreement of the average Rg for the pools generated in both modes with the theoretical estimations of Rg using equation (3)[link]. Thus search pools generated in both modes by EOM 2.0 well represent chemically denatured proteins as well as IDPs. Moreover, the a posteriori-extracted parameter v is in agreement with the theoretical values found in the literature (Fig. S4).

4.3. Discrimination between distinct conformations

EOM is often employed for the analysis of flexible multi-domain particles, especially proteins, for which high-resolution fragment structures are available (i.e. domains, subunits, ligands). These modular systems often provide regulatory mechanisms by adopting specific subsets of conformations in solution. For example, open and closed protein conformations can expose or hide important surface residues essential for interaction with specific or generic partners, with conformational flexibility the key driver of the function. SAXS-driven ensemble fitting approaches are well suited to the study of these systems, providing the means to examine the degree of flexibility and to discriminate between the dominant conformations present under specific solution conditions.

The high-resolution structures of the protein calmodulin, a Ca2+-binding protein with a myriad of cellular functions dependent on its conformational state, were used to test the power of EOM 2.0 to discriminate between open [PDB entry 1cll (Chattopadhyaya et al., 1992[Chattopadhyaya, R., Meador, W. E., Means, A. R. & Quiocho, F.A. (1992). J. Mol. Biol. 228, 1177-1192.]), Rg = 22.6 Å] and closed [PDB entry 1ctr (Cook et al., 1994[Cook, W. J., Walter, L. J. & Walter, M. R. (1994). Biochemistry, 33, 15259-15265.]), Rg = 16.7 Å] conformations. As calmodulin has two well defined EF-hand domains connected by a labile helical linker, it provides an excellent case to test the capacity of EOM 2.0 to identify dominant conformational states from an ensemble of configurations. The theoretical scattering intensities of the open and closed forms of calmodulin were calculated using CRYSOL (Svergun et al., 1995[Banavali, N. K. & Roux, B. (2009). Proteins, 74, 378-389.]), and the theoretical scattering intensity of a mixture of open and closed conformations (no intermediate conformations are here considered) simulated by averaging the intensities of the open and closed forms using PRIMUS (Konarev et al., 2003[Banavali, N. K. & Roux, B. (2009). Proteins, 74, 378-389.]). Three pools of 30 000 conformations were generated, each with a different flexible sequence length between the two EF-hand domains (zero, six or 12 amino acids). The theoretical SAXS profiles of calmodulin corresponding to the open, closed and mixture states were used as input for EOM 2.0 and the ability of the program to identify the dominant conformations tested. The resulting distributions of Rg presented in Fig. 5[link] show that in all cases the genetic algorithm was able to resolve the two conformations (i.e. open versus closed), demonstrating that EOM 2.0 has sufficient discriminating power for the successful resolution of distinct conformations from a solution mixture.

[Figure 5]
Figure 5
Distributions of Rg pools (blue) and selected ensembles (red) for determination of open and closed conformations of calmodulin using three different lengths of inter-domain disordered linkers (zero, six and 12 amino acids) for the pool generation. Violet and light blue triangles show Rg for closed and open conformations, respectively.

4.4. EOM resolution and multimodal distributions

The question of the `resolution' of EOM is clearly important, especially when dealing with multimodal distributions. In a bimodal distribution of Rg, for example, what is the minimum difference between the two dominant Rg peaks or `subpopulations' that can be distinguished? To test the resolution of EOM 2.0, an initial pool (10 000 models) of polyalanine (either 100 or 500 amino acids) was generated and a subset of conformers representing two subpopulations, each with a different mean Rg and standard deviation, extracted. The theoretical scattering intensities of the members of the subset were calculated by CRYSOL and averaged, producing a simulated test data set. These data were then used as input for selection against another independently generated pool (10 000 models of either 100- or 500-residue polyalanine), and the resulting selected size distributions were examined. The test was repeated several times varying the difference between the mean Rg of each subpopulation and also their standard deviations. The Rg distributions produced from these tests demonstrate the resolution capability of EOM 2.0, where the bimodal distributions expected are indeed observed, indicating that subpopulations of structures can be resolved (Fig. S5). The results show that the resolution does not depend on the width (standard deviation) of the subpopulations, up to the point of intersection, but strongly depends on the absolute difference in the value of mean Rg. As shown in Fig. 6[link], two subpopulations should show a relative difference greater than approximately two times the standard deviation of the pool from which they come in order to be distinguished. This result did not depend on the number of amino acids in the protein.

[Figure 6]
Figure 6
Comparison of Rg distributions showing that subpopulations of conformers can be identified from a large ensemble if the difference between their mean Rg is greater than approximately two times the standard deviations of the original pool (bottom left). The Rg values of the two subpopulations are indicated as vertical lines on each plot.

4.5. Robust ensemble fitting and the impact of noise

Any method based on fitting experimental data with generated models is subject to the presence of experimental errors. To test the robustness of EOM 2.0 to random noise, the following simulations were conducted: (i) a pool of 10 000 polyalanine structures (100 amino-acid residues) was generated and five models with Rg close to the mean of the pool (29.05 Å) were selected. The theoretical scattering curves of the selected models were computed with CRYSOL and averaged. The scattering curve was then modified by adding random noise with the magnitude from 0 to 20% of the intensity values in order to simulate errors and varying data quality in experimental data (Fig. S6A). The procedure was repeated 50 times and all these simulated scattering curves were used as input for EOM 2.0. The same initial pool was used for the genetic algorithm as the software should provide similar solution, irrespective of the noise level. Strikingly, even at a high noise level (up to 20%) and with a good fit, the average Rg for the final ensemble solution is found to be in very good agreement with the Rg computed from the Guinier region (Fig. S6B). This remarkable stability of the average Rg is not surprising if one considers that the value is effectively determined using the information from the entire scattering pattern, and not just from the Guinier region. It can therefore be concluded that EOM 2.0 is able to provide reliable solutions up to a 20% noise level in the experimental data.

5. Discussion

Techniques and strategies targeting unstructured systems such as IDPs and flexible modular proteins are increasingly used by researchers. Understanding how structural disorder relates to function requires modification of approaches in structural biology, as such systems are not, for example, readily crystallized for MX studies. Ensemble-based methods have been introduced for the characterization of flexible biological macromolecules and have been shown to be a highly useful addition to the tools employed in unstructural biology (Tompa, 2011[Tompa, P. (2011). Curr. Opin. Struct. Biol. 21, 419-425.]). The main goal of the present work was the enhancement of the capability of a widely used ensemble-based SAXS approach for the characterization of flexible particles. The original EOM was applied frequently since its release in 2007 (over 370 citations as to September 2014), yielding interesting results and new insights for numerous flexible systems. The functional limitations of the approach have also been highlighted by the active user community, providing the impetus for further development of the method.

In the present work we describe an enhanced EOM 2.0, which has been redesigned in a modular format allowing also for further modifications and future developments. An artificial intelligence approach for the generation of ad hoc flexible linkers has been introduced, enabling an adequate pool generation, and tools for the generation of multi-subunit assemblies with defined interfaces, symmetry and flexible linker regions were introduced. These improvements overcome the limitations of the original implementation, where only single-chain particles could be modelled and symmetry was not considered. EOM 2.0 has already been successfully employed in a prototypal study of the flexible, trimeric protein gephyrin (Sander et al., 2013[Sander, B., Tria, G., Shkumatov, A. V., Kim, E.-Y., Grossmann, J. G., Tessmer, I., Svergun, D. I. & Schindelin, H. (2013). Acta Cryst. D69, 2050-2060.]), where the new multi-subunit capabilities facilitated the first structural study of this dynamic protein in solution.

A question often asked of ensemble-based methods concerns the number of conformations required to represent the selected ensemble. In EOM 2.0 an optimal ensemble size can be automatically determined during the selection procedure driven by the genetic algorithm. This new optimization reduced potential overfitting as shown by the application of both EOM and EOM 2.0 to the work of Soykan et al. (2014[Soykan, T., Schneeberger, D., Tria, G., Buechner, C., Bader, N., Svergun, D., Tessmer, I., Poulopoulos, A., Papadopoulos, T., Varoqueaux, F., Schindelin, H. & Brose, N. (2014). EMBO J. 33, 2113-2133.]) where a point mutation of the enzyme collybistin (CBSH3+E262A) favours the flexibility of its SH3 domain and thus the synaptogenic activity of collybistin in recruiting the partner protein gephyrin. The ensemble of runtime-optimized number of conformations provided by EOM 2.0 yields similar results with a smaller number of conformers compared to that of the user analysis with a manually defined number of conformations (Fig. S7). Generally, the fewer conformers selected by EOM 2.0, the more rigid the protein; flexible systems still need dozen(s) of conformers in the optimized ensemble. The automated selection of the number of conformers is an alternative to the approaches implemented by other groups, e.g. minimal set (Pelikan et al., 2009[Pelikan, M., Hura, G. L. & Hammel, M. (2009). Gen. Physiol. Biophys. 28, 174-189.]) or jackknife procedure jointly using NMR and SAXS data (Sterckx et al., 2014[Sterckx, Y. G. J., Volkov, A. N., Vranken, W. F., Kragelj, J., Ringkjøbing Jensen, M., Buts, L., Garcia-Pino, A., Jové, T., Van Melderen, L., Blackledge, M., van Nuland, N. A. J. & Loris, R. (2014). Structure, 22, 854-865.]).

EOM 2.0 makes it possible to combine multiple independently generated pools, expanding the search space of the method. This capability was critical in the study of an oligomeric mixture of full-length mitochondrial glutaminase C (Møller et al., 2013[Møller, M., Nielsen, S. S., Ramachandran, S., Li, Y., Li, Y., Tria, G., Streicher, W., Petoukhov, M. V., Cerione, R. A., Gillilan, R. E. & Vestergaard, B. (2013). PLoS One, 8, e74783.]), where EOM 2.0 was used to search simultaneously through three different search pools (dimer, tetramer and octamer). The results obtained explain how the disordered regions of this protein influence the distribution of oligomeric states and thus the enzymatic activity. This study provided the first ever experimentally derived structural model of the full-length mitochondrial glutaminase C, highlighting the crucial role played by the disordered regions in keeping the enzyme tetrameric – which corresponds to the active state.

The results of the original EOM were analysed through visual inspection of the distributions. Structural features were identified qualitatively by the user and the discrimination of significant differences between distributions was performed interactively. Here, two metrics facilitating a quantitative measure of flexibility have been introduced, Rflex and Rσ, complementing the low-resolution structural descriptors, Rg and Dmax. The combined use of the new metrics provides a powerful tool for the automatic detection of potential artifacts that may lead to spurious conclusions. The utility of the combined Rflex and Rσ is well illustrated in cases where the distributions of selected ensembles are multimodal. For example, an extreme bimodal distribution (Fig. S2B, red), interpreted naively based only on visual inspection, may lead to the conclusion that the system has maximum possible flexibility. If this is indeed the case, Rflex of both the random pool and the selected ensemble will be similar (with Rflex approaching 100%). However, if the naive conclusion is wrong, Rflex of the selected ensemble will be significantly lower than that of the pool (Rflex of the selected ensemble lower than ∼50%) suggesting a reduced flexibility.

The application of Rflex and Rσ to reanalyse the data of the multi-domain urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) (Mertens et al., 2012[Mertens, H. D., Kjaergaard, M., Mysling, S., Gardsvoll, H., Jorgensen, T. J. D., Svergun, D. I. & Ploug, M. (2012). J. Biol. Chem. 287, 34304-34315.]) demonstrates the suitability of these new metrics for systematic studies of domain flexibility. In this study the recalcitrant uPAR was investigated by solution SAXS due to an inability to crystallize the receptor, suggesting that the domains of uPAR may be flexible and hinting that perhaps such flexibility may also drive function. The analysis demonstrated that the wild-type receptor was indeed flexible, compared with a stabilized mutant [for which the crystal structure of a closed conformation could be determined (Xu et al., 2012[Xu, X., Gårdsvoll, H., Yuan, C., Lin, L., Ploug, M. & Huang, M. (2012). J. Mol. Biol. 416, 629-641.])]. Using the metric Rflex the flexibility of wild-type uPAR – previously only qualitatively assessed (Fig. 7[link]a) – is quantified as Rflex = ∼82% suggesting a nearly random conformation of the linkers (with a threshold of randomness derived from the pool of ∼85%). Conversely, the cysteine-bridged mutant of the receptor, uPARH47C-N259C, shows significantly reduced flexibility quantified by an Rflex = ∼45% (Fig. 7[link]b).

[Figure 7]
Figure 7
Characterization of the flexibility of uPARWT and the mutated uPARH47C-N259C using EOM 2.0. (a) Size distributions (Rg) of uPARWT and uPARH47C-N259C, providing only a qualitative assessment through direct comparison of the distributions of the selected ensembles and the pool. (b) The metrics Rflex and Rσ enable characterization of the flexibility quantitatively, with Rflex = ∼82% and Rflex = ∼45%, for uPARWT and uPARH47C-N259C, respectively, reflecting a significant change in compactness of the particle upon mutation (with a threshold of randomness of ∼85% calculated from the pool).

EOM 2.0 has been extensively tested in order to demonstrate the benefits as well as identify the limitations of its use. Random coils as well as more ordered/native structures conforming to theoretical expectation in terms of Rg can be generated and pools of 10 000 conformations have been shown to well approximate the entire conformational space (otherwise infinite) for very flexible particles such as IDPs. The capability and limitations of EOM 2.0 to discriminate between open/closed conformations have also been studied. The program with the manual can be freely downloaded as part of the ATSAS package from https://www.embl-hamburg.de/biosaxs/software.html and the users may post queries to the discussion forum https://www.saxier.org/forum/viewforum.php?f=10 .

6. Conclusions

Ensemble Optimization Method, EOM 2.0, for the characterization of flexible systems using SAXS in solution has been redesigned, and its application range broadened to oligomeric systems as well as macromolecular complexes. In addition, metrics for quantitative measurement and identification of flexibility have been introduced facilitating quantitative and systematic analysis of the studies of flexible macromolecules in solution.

Physical simulation methods using molecular dynamics and energy minimization to predict macromolecular trajectories are providing more and more impact in the modelling of flexible systems (e.g. Banavali & Roux, 2011[Chouard, T. (2011). Nature, 471, 151-153.]; Brewer et al., 2011[Brewer, A., Siligardi, G., Neylon, C. & Stulz, E. (2011). Org. Biomol. Chem. 9, 777-782.]; Das & Pappu, 2013[Das, R. K. & Pappu, R. V. (2013). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 110, 13392-13397.]; Luan et al., 2014[Luan, B., Lyle, N., Pappu, R. V. & Raleigh, D. P. (2014). Biochemistry, 53, 39-47.]). Consequently, a lively discussion has emerged on the relations between experimentally derived ensembles and those predicted by physical simulations (Jensen & Blackledge, 2014[Jensen, M. R. & Blackledge, M. (2014). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 111, E1557-E1558.]; Wang et al., 2014[Wang, Y., Longhi, S., Roche, P. & Wang, J. (2014). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 111, E1559.]). EOM 2.0 can easily be used for bridging SAXS, computational methods or other experimental techniques given the possibility to use any external pool (e.g. generated with molecular dynamics, based on NMR or others) in the ensemble selection. The developments presented here should therefore enhance the role of solution SAXS as an essential structural method to be synergistically coupled with complementary high-resolution techniques in the study of flexible particles.

Supporting information


Acknowledgements

GT was supported by the Human Frontier Science Program research grant to DIS (contract No. RGP0017/2012). MK acknowledges the support of the European Commission (the Seventh Framework Programme) Marie Curie grant IDPbyNMR (contract No. 264257). The work was supported by the European Commission grant BioStruct-X, project No. 283570.

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IUCrJ
Volume 2| Part 2| March 2015| Pages 207-217
ISSN: 2052-2525