Computational design, fabrication and evaluation of rubber protein models

•We introduce a complete workflow for the fabrication of soft 3D models of complex proteins.•The workflow enables the fabrication of tangible models of proteins of any size and unprecedented geometric complexity.•Our technique is cost-effective, easy to reproduce, and scales well with the number of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Computers & graphics Vol. 98; pp. 177 - 187
Main Authors: Alderighi, Thomas, Giorgi, Daniela, Malomo, Luigi, Cignoni, Paolo, Zoppè, Monica
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01-08-2021
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:•We introduce a complete workflow for the fabrication of soft 3D models of complex proteins.•The workflow enables the fabrication of tangible models of proteins of any size and unprecedented geometric complexity.•Our technique is cost-effective, easy to reproduce, and scales well with the number of copies to be fabricated.•Our models can illustrate biological functional characteristics and behavior, which are difficult to convey with traditional methods.•We present fabricated models for a set relevant proteins.•We report positive evaluation of our models in a classroom setting (constrained by the coronavirus emergency). [Display omitted] Tangible 3D molecular models conceptualize complex phenomena in a stimulating and engaging format. This is especially true for learning environments, where additive manufacturing is increasingly used to produce teaching aids for chemical education. However, the 3D models presented previously are limited in the type of molecules they can represent and the amount of information they carry. In addition, they have little role in representing complex biological entities such as proteins. We present the first complete workflow for the fabrication of soft models of complex proteins of any size. We leverage on molding technologies to generate accurate, soft models which incorporate both spatial and functional aspects of large molecules. Our method covers the whole pipeline from molecular surface preparation and editing to actual 3D model fabrication. The models fabricated with our strategy can be used as aids to illustrate biological functional behavior, such as assembly in quaternary structure and docking mechanisms, which are difficult to convey with traditional visualization methods. We applied the proposed framework to fabricate a set of 3D protein models, and we validated the appeal of our approach in a classroom setting.
ISSN:0097-8493
1873-7684
DOI:10.1016/j.cag.2021.05.010