8th Community Wide Experiment on the
Critical Assessment of Techniques for Protein Structure Prediction
CASP8 Experiment

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CASP8 in numbers

Description of the experiment

Goals Scope Timetable Participation Targets Format Assessment Results Meeting Organizers

Goals

The main goal of CASP is to obtain an in-depth and objective assessment of our current abilities and inabilities in the area of protein structure prediction. To this end, participants will predict as much as possible about a set of soon to be known structures. These will be true predictions, not ‘post-dictions’ made on already known structures.

CASP8 will particularly address the following questions:

  1. Are the models produced similar to the corresponding experimental structure?
  2. Is the mapping of the target sequence onto the proposed structure (i.e. the alignment) correct?
  3. Have similar structures that a model can be based on been identified?
  4. Are comparative models more accurate than can be obtained by simply copying the best template?
  5. Has there been progress from the earlier CASPs?
  6. What methods are most effective?
  7. Where can future effort be most productively focused?

Scope

Tertiary structure predictions. As in CASP7, we will use two broad categories to define modeling difficulty of the targets. The 'Template based modeling' category will include domains where a suitable template can be identified that covers all or nearly all of the target. The 'Template free modeling' category will include models of proteins for which no suitable template can be identified.

High resolution models. This relatively new category (introduced in CASP7) will include a subset of tertiary structure models in which the backbone is sufficiently accurate so that the details of the side chains, loops, and active sites can be meaningfully assessed. In addition, success in refining any models beyond the quality obtained by simply copying from a single template will also be analyzed. As in CASP7, we will also select a subset of targets for refinement from among the best models received during the prediction season, and these best models will be reissued as starting structures for refinement. A separate assessor will judge these high accuracy modeling cases.

Other predictions. As in previous CASPs, we will be assessing the ability of predictors to define boundaries of structural domains, detect residue-residue contacts and identify disordered regions in target proteins. Function prediction, a new category introduced in CASP6, will be restricted to the prediction of binding sites. We will also evaluate ability of predictors to judge on the quality of models (without knowing native structures) and the reliability of predicting certain residues in the structure. Following recommendations of CASP7 predictor meeting, quaternary structure predictions (multimers) will not be the part of the CASP8 experiment.

Timetable

Registration for the experiment will start in the last week of March. The first prediction targets will be released not earlier than May 5; the last prediction targets will be released not later than July 18; prediction season will end not later than August 1. The CASP meeting will take place on December 3-7, and approximately one month before that, groups with the most accurate and interesting predictions will receive invitations to give talks. There will also be discussion of predictions and methods on the FORCASP web site.

Participation

Participation is open to all. To register for CASP8, you will have to register with the Prediction Center first, and only then - for CASP8 (the basic information from the Prediction Center registration will be passed along to the CASP8 registration server). Intending participants, and those interested in receiving mailings concerning progress of the experiment will have the possibility to register for the experiment from this web page. Predictors with servers will be requested to register as soon as the registration page is available as we are planning on having a dry run for servers in the first part of April.

Targets

For the experiment to succeed, it is essential that we obtain the help of the experimental community. As in previous CASPs, we will invite protein crystallographers and NMR spectroscopists to provide details of structures they expect to have made public before September 1, 2008. A target submission form will be available at this web site in mid-April. Prediction targets will be made available through this web site. All targets will be assigned an expiry date, and predictions must be received and accepted before that expiration date. According to the recommendations of the CASP7 predictors meeting, we will be releasing about 50 targets for evaluation in the human and server track and as many targets as we can for evaluation in the server-only track (including "human and server" targets). The human-expert groups wishing to take the challenge and predict all of the released targets (including the "server-only" ones) are welcome to do so but the evaluation accent will be placed on the selected targets. Subject to the availability, we will give priority to targets containing low homology domains for inclusion in the human-expert modeling experiment.

Submission of Predictions

Predictions must be submitted to this web site or through the email in CASP format. For 3D coordinate predictions, this is a simple PDB-like file with consecutive numbering of residues 1 -> N and a small number of required headers.

Assessment of Predictions

As in previous CASPs, independent assessors will evaluate the predictions. Assessors will be provided with the results of numerical evaluation of predictions, and will judge the results primarily on that basis. They will be asked to focus particularly on the effectiveness of different methods. Numerical evaluation criteria will as far as possible be similar to those used in previous CASPs, although the assessors may be permitted to introduce some additional ones.

There are four assessors, focusing on the following areas of prediction:
       Jane Richardson and group (Duke University, North Carolina, USA) - template based modeling and quality assessment prediction
       Joel Sussman (The Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel) - for template free modeling and disorder prediction
       Ken Dill (University of California, San Francisco, USA) - prediction refinement and physics-based prediction methods
       Michael Tress (CNIO, Madrid) - prediction of function, domain and contacts

In accordance with CASP policy, assessors are not directly involved in the organization of the experiment, nor can they take part in the experiment as predictors. Predictors must not contact assessors directly with queries, but rather these should be sent to the email address. Click here for the list of previous CASP assessors.

Results and Publication

All CASP predictions and evaluations will be made available through this web site shortly before the meeting. The proceedings of the meeting will be published. All participants will also be encouraged to fully report their results and methods on the FORCASP web site. Contributions to the site will be discussed and scored by other predictors, and this material will be taken into account in choosing some presentations at the meeting.

Meeting

The meeting to discuss results of the experiment will be held on the island of Sardinia, Italy, December 3-7, 2008 (starting at 6pm on the 3rd and ending at 12pm on the 7th, tentatively). The meeting will take place at Hotel Setar , near Cagliari. The hotel is located in Quartu S. Elena, 10 kilometers from Cagliari and 15 from the Cagliari airport. As customary in CASP, the hotel is on the beach! A lot of useful information about the meeting venue can be found here . The meeting will have limited attendance (about 300 participants) and precedence will be given to active predictors. Some financial assistance will be available for the most successful predictors and students.

Organizing Committee

       John Moult, CARB, University of Maryland, USA

       Krzysztof Fidelis, University of California, Davis, USA
       Andriy Kryshtafovych, University of California, Davis, USA
       Burkhard Rost, Columbia University, New York, USA
       Anna Tramontano, University of Rome, Italy

Last 5 targets for refinement
Five targets for the refinement experiment have been released yesterday and today. The details of the suggested refinement targets are provided in the pdb files for the starting models and in the "Add ...
End of CASP8 target release
With the two server-only targets today, all CASP8 targets have been made available for prediction. In this round of CASP we have released 128 targets including 57 human/server targets. One target has ...
Human/server targets are over
We have finished releasing human/server targets for prediction in CASP8. Last week we released more targets of this type than usual in order to give you full 3 weeks to predict each of them. All in al ...
 
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