The scripts and input files that accompany this demo can be found in the
demos/public
directory of the Rosetta weekly releases.
KEYWORDS: DESIGN GENERAL
This protocol runs ab inito for a domain insertion protein per the Broker paper. Because the loop closure for this protocol is particularly difficult, and because the loop closure algorithm in this example relies on fragments to perform the closure, the loop closure succeeds rather infrequently. The problem is that, for many non-native loops, fragment coverage of the required region of conformational space does not exist.
As a result, loop closure failed for me in >90% of cases. Thus, to test this protocol, you must run with -n 100 or greater. Alternatively, the closure is always able to close the loops in the native structure, so if the sampling protocol starts near a correct (or probably any closable) structure, so you can run with -s native.pdb to produce a closed structure nearly every time.
An additional tip for producing output more quickly is to disable (or turn down) the relaxation step at the end. Because relaxation is done system-wide and not exclusively for the inserted domain, it can have a very long runtime.
Assuming Rosetta is in your home directory, you run as follows:
$ tar -xvf frags.tar.gz
$ rosetta_scripts.default.linuxgccrelease @flags
where platform and compiler is replaced with your platform and compiler