Publications by authors named "Patryk A Wesolowski"

The androgen receptor (AR) transduces the effects of circulating and tumor-derived androgens to the nucleus through ligand-induced changes in protein conformation, localization, and chromatin engagement. Defining how these events are integrated with signal transduction is critical to understand how AR drives prostate cancer and unveil pathway features that are potentially amenable to therapeutic intervention. We describe a novel post-transcriptional mechanism that controls AR levels on chromatin and gene output based on highly selective, inducible degradation.

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In this study, a three-layered multicenter ONIOM approach is implemented to characterize the naive folding pathway of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). Each layer represents a distinct level of theory, where the initial layer, encompassing the entire protein, is modeled by a general all-atom force-field GFN-FF. An intermediate electronic structure layer consisting of three multicenter fragments is introduced with the state-of-the-art semiempirical tight-binding method GFN2-TB.

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Conformer-rotamer sampling tool (CREST) is an open-source program for the efficient and automated exploration of molecular chemical space. Originally developed in Pracht et al. [Phys.

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The self-assembly of proteins is encoded in the underlying potential energy surface (PES), from which we can predict structure, dynamics, and thermodynamic properties. However, the corresponding analysis becomes increasingly challenging with larger protein sizes, due to the computational time required, which grows significantly with the number of atoms. Coarse-grained models offer an attractive approach to reduce the computational cost.

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We present the results for CAPRI Round 50, the fourth joint CASP-CAPRI protein assembly prediction challenge. The Round comprised a total of twelve targets, including six dimers, three trimers, and three higher-order oligomers. Four of these were easy targets, for which good structural templates were available either for the full assembly, or for the main interfaces (of the higher-order oligomers).

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The UNited RESidue (UNRES) force field was tested in the 14th Community Wide Experiment on the Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction (CASP14), in which larger oligomeric and multimeric targets were present compared to previous editions. Three prediction modes were tested (i) ab initio (the UNRES group), (ii) contact-assisted (the UNRES-contact group), and (iii) template-assisted (the UNRES-template group). For most of the targets, the contact restraints were derived from the server models top-ranked by the DeepQA method, while the DNCON2 method was used for 11 targets.

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