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31 August 2021 | Story Leonie Bolleurs | Photo Supplied
UFS scientists involved in revolutionary protein structure prediction
Left: Dr Ana Ebrecht, a former postdoctoral student of the UFS, was part of the team that validated the data for the Science paper. Right: Prof Dirk Opperman was involved in a revolutionary finding in biology, which predicts the structure of a protein. His work in collaboration with other scientists has been published in Science.

Prof Dirk Opperman, Associate Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Biochemistry at the University of the Free State (UFS), in collaboration with Dr Ana Ebrecht (a former postdoc in the same department) and Prof Albie van Dijk from the Department of Biochemistry at the North-West University (NWU), was part of an international collaboration of researchers who participated in solving an intricate problem in science – accurate protein structure prediction.

The team of researchers recently contributed to an influential paper describing new methods in protein structure prediction using machine learning. The paper was published in the prestigious scientific journal, Science.

“These new prediction methods can be a game changer,” believes Prof Opperman.

“As some proteins simply do not crystalise, this could be the closest we get to a three-dimensional view of the protein. Accurate enough prediction of proteins, each with its own unique three-dimensional shape, can also be used in molecular replacement (MR) instead of laborious techniques such as incorporating heavy metals into the protein structure or replacing sulphur atoms with selenium,” he says.

Having insight into the three-dimensional structure of a protein has the potential to enable more advanced drug discovery, and subsequently, managing diseases.

Exploring several avenues …

According to Prof Opperman, protein structure prediction has been available for many years in the form of traditional homological modelling; however, there was a big possibility of erroneous prediction, especially if no closely related protein structures are known.

Besides limited complementary techniques such as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and electron microscopy (Cryo-EM), he explains that the only way around this is to experimentally determine the structure of the protein through crystallisation and X-ray diffraction. “But it is a quite laborious and long technique,” he says.

Prof Opperman adds that with X-ray diffraction, one also has to deal with what is known in X-ray crystallography as the ‘phase problem’ – solving the protein structure even after you have crystallised the protein and obtained good X-ray diffraction data, as some information is lost.

He states that the phase problem can be overcome if another similar-looking protein has already been determined.

This indeed proved to be a major stumbling block in the determination of bovine glycine N-acyltransferase (GLYAT), a protein crystallised in Prof Opperman’s research group by Dr Ebrecht, currently a postdoc in Prof Van Dijk’s group at the NWU, as no close structural homologous proteins were available.

“The collaboration with Prof Opperman’s research group has allowed us to continue with this research that has been on hold for almost 16 years,” says Prof Van Dijk, who believes the UFS has the resources and facilities for structural research that not many universities in Africa can account for.

The research was conducted under the Synchrotron Techniques for African Research and Technology (START) initiative, funded by the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF). After a year and multiple data collections at a specialised facility, Diamond Light Source (synchrotron) in the United Kingdom, the team was still unable to solve the structure.

Dr Carmien Tolmie, a colleague from the UFS Department of Microbiology and Biochemistry, also organised a Collaborative Computational Project Number 4 (CCP4) workshop, attended by several well-known experts in the field. Still, the experts who usually participate in helping students and researchers in structural biology to solve the most complex cases, were stumped by this problem.

Working with artificial intelligence

“We ultimately decided to turn to a technique called sulphur single-wavelength anomalous dispersion (S-SAD), only available at specialised beam-lines at synchrotrons, to solve the phase problem, says Prof Opperman.

Meanwhile, Prof Randy Read from the University of Cambridge, who lectured at the workshop hosted by Dr Tolmie, was aware of the difficulties in solving the GLYAT structure. He also knew of the Baker Lab at the University of Washington, which is working on a new way to predict protein structures; they developed RoseTTAaFold to predict the folding of proteins by only using the amino acid sequence as starting point.

RoseTTAaFold, inspired by AlphaFold 2, the programme of DeepMind (a company that develops general-purpose artificial intelligence (AGI) technology), uses deep learning artificial intelligence (AI) to generate the ‘most-likely’ model. “This turned out to be a win-win situation, as they could accurately enough predict the protein structure for the UFS, and the UFS in turn could validate their predictions,” explains Prof Opperman.

A few days after the predictions from the Baker Lab, the S-SAD experiments at Diamond Light Source confirmed the solution to the problem when they came up with the same answer.

Stunning results in a short time

“Although Baker’s group based their development on the DeepMind programme, the way the software works is not completely the same,” says Dr Ebrecht. “In fact, AlphaFold 2 has a slightly better prediction accuracy. Both, however, came with stunningly good results in an incredibly short time (a few minutes to a few hours),” she says.

Both codes are now freely available, which will accelerate improvements in the field even more. Any researcher can now use that code to develop new software. In addition, RoseTTAFold is offered on a platform accessible to any researcher, even if they lack knowledge in coding and AI.

News Archive

Media: Sunday Times
2006-05-20

Sunday Times, 4 June 2006

True leadership may mean admitting disunity
 

In this edited extract from the inaugural King Moshoeshoe Memorial Lecture at the University of the Free State, Professor Njabulo S Ndebele explores the leadership challenges facing South Africa

RECENT events have created a sense that we are undergoing a serious crisis of leadership in our new democracy. An increasing number of highly intelligent, sensitive and committed South Africans, across class, racial and cultural spectrums, confess to feeling uncertain and vulnerable as never before since 1994.

When indomitable optimists confess to having a sense of things unhinging, the misery of anxiety spreads. We have the sense that events are spiralling out of control and that no one among the leadership of the country seems to have a definitive handle on things.

There can be nothing more debilitating than a generalised and undefined sense of anxiety in the body politic. It breeds conspiracies and fear.

There is an impression that a very complex society has developed, in the last few years, a rather simple, centralised governance mechanism in the hope that delivery can be better and more quickly driven. The complexity of governance then gets located within a single structure of authority rather than in the devolved structures envisaged in the Constitution, which should interact with one another continuously, and in response to their specific settings, to achieve defined goals. Collapse in a single structure of authority, because there is no robust backup, can be catastrophic.

The autonomy of devolved structures presents itself as an impediment only when visionary cohesion collapses. Where such cohesion is strong, the impediment is only illusory, particularly when it encourages healthy competition, for example, among the provinces, or where a province develops a character that is not necessarily autonomous politically but rather distinctive and a special source of regional pride. Such competition brings vibrancy to the country. It does not necessarily challenge the centre.

Devolved autonomy is vital in the interests of sustainable governance. The failure of various structures to actualise their constitutionally defined roles should not be attributed to the failure of the prescribed governance mechanism. It is too early to say that what we have has not worked. The only viable corrective will be in our ability to be robust in identifying the problems and dealing with them concertedly.

We have never had social cohesion in South Africa — certainly not since the Natives’ Land Act of 1913. What we definitely have had over the decades is a mobilising vision. Could it be that the mobilising vision, mistaken for social cohesion, is cracking under the weight of the reality and extent of social reconstruction, and that the legitimate framework for debating these problems is collapsing? If that is so, are we witnessing a cumulative failure of leadership?

I am making a descriptive rather than an evaluative inquiry. I do not believe that there is any single entity to be blamed. It is simply that we may be a country in search of another line of approach. What will it be?

I would like to suggest two avenues of approach — an inclusive model and a counter-intuitive model of leadership.

In an inclusive approach, leadership is exercised not only by those who have been put in some position of power to steer an organisation or institution. Leadership is what all of us do when we express, sincerely, our deepest feelings and thoughts; when we do our work, whatever it is, with passion and integrity.

Counter-intuitive leadership lies in the ability of leaders to read a problematic situation, assess probable outcomes and then recognise that those outcomes will only compound the problem. Genuine leadership, in this sense, requires going against probability in seeking unexpected outcomes. That’s what happened when we avoided a civil war and ended up with an “unexpected” democracy.

Right now, we may very well hear desperate calls for unity, when the counter-intuitive imperative would be to acknowledge disunity. A declaration of unity where it manifestly does not appear to exist will fail to reassure.

Many within the “broad alliance” might have the view that the mobilising vision of old may have transformed into a strategy of executive steering with a disposition towards an expectation of compliance. No matter how compelling the reasons for that tendency, it may be seen as part of a cumulative process in which popular notions of democratic governance are apparently undermined and devalued; and where public uncertainty in the midst of seeming crisis induces fear which could freeze public thinking at a time when more voices ought to be heard.

Could it be that part of the problem is that we are unable to deal with the notion of opposition? We are horrified that any of us could be seen to have become “the opposition”. The word has been demonised. In reality, it is time we began to anticipate the arrival of a moment when there is no longer a single, overwhelmingly dominant political force as is currently the case. Such is the course of history. The measure of the maturity of the current political environment will be in how it can create conditions that anticipate that moment rather than seek to prevent it. We see here once more the essential creativity of the counter-intuitive imperative.

This is the formidable challenge of a popular post-apartheid political movement. Can it conceptually anticipate a future when it is no longer overwhelmingly in control, in the form in which it is currently, and resist, counter-intuitively, the temptation to prevent such an eventuality? Successfully resisting such an option would enable its current vision and its ultimate legacy to our country to manifest in different articulations, which then contend for social influence. In this way, the vision never really dies; it simply evolves into higher, more complex forms of itself. Consider the metaphor of flying ants replicating the ant community by establishing new ones.

We may certainly experience the meaning of comradeship differently, where we will now have “comrades on the other side”.

Any political movement that imagines itself as a perpetual entity should look at the compelling evidence of history. Few movements have survived those defining moments when they should have been more elastic, and that because they were not, did not live to see the next day.

I believe we may have reached a moment not fundamentally different from the sobering, yet uplifting and vision-making, nation-building realities that led to Kempton Park in the early ’90s. The difference between then and now is that the black majority is not facing white compatriots across the negotiating table. Rather, it is facing itself: perhaps really for the first time since 1994. Could we apply to ourselves the same degree of inventiveness and rigorous negotiation we displayed leading up to the adoption or our Constitution?

This is not a time for repeating old platitudes. It is the time, once more, for vision.

In the total scheme of things, the outcome could be as disastrous as it could be formative and uplifting, setting in place the conditions for a true renaissance that could be sustained for generations to come.

Ndebele is Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town and author of the novel The Cry of Winnie Mandela

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