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Graph identification of proteins in tomograms (GRIP-Tomo)
Authors:August George  Doo Nam Kim  Trevor Moser  Ian T Gildea  James E Evans  Margaret S Cheung
Institution:1. Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

Department of Biomedical Engineering, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon, USA

Contribution: Conceptualization (supporting), Data curation (supporting), ​Investigation (supporting), Methodology (supporting), Software (equal), Validation (equal), Visualization (equal), Writing - original draft (supporting), Writing - review & editing (supporting);2. Biological Science Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA;3. Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

Contribution: Data curation (supporting), Methodology (supporting), Software (supporting), Writing - review & editing (supporting);4. Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

Contribution: ​Investigation (supporting), Methodology (supporting), Visualization (supporting);5. Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA

Abstract:In this study, we present a method of pattern mining based on network theory that enables the identification of protein structures or complexes from synthetic volume densities, without the knowledge of predefined templates or human biases for refinement. We hypothesized that the topological connectivity of protein structures is invariant, and they are distinctive for the purpose of protein identification from distorted data presented in volume densities. Three-dimensional densities of a protein or a complex from simulated tomographic volumes were transformed into mathematical graphs as observables. We systematically introduced data distortion or defects such as missing fullness of data, the tumbling effect, and the missing wedge effect into the simulated volumes, and varied the distance cutoffs in pixels to capture the varying connectivity between the density cluster centroids in the presence of defects. A similarity score between the graphs from the simulated volumes and the graphs transformed from the physical protein structures in point data was calculated by comparing their network theory order parameters including node degrees, betweenness centrality, and graph densities. By capturing the essential topological features defining the heterogeneous morphologies of a network, we were able to accurately identify proteins and homo-multimeric complexes from 10 topologically distinctive samples without realistic noise added. Our approach empowers future developments of tomogram processing by providing pattern mining with interpretability, to enable the classification of single-domain protein native topologies as well as distinct single-domain proteins from multimeric complexes within noisy volumes.
Keywords:dimensional reduction  graph theory  multimeric structure  native structure  network theory
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